Not legally but many spouses do for each other that have been together a while and share accounts etc. as a matter of course. Sometimes a spouse will pick up a husbands check and cash to get groceries before he gets off work. Of course his signature/id should still be required but small liquor stores etc start to bend rules on smaller checks after you build a relationship. I have been with my mate over 30 years and to be honest, don't think the bank would even know her signature anymore and entirely with her consent, since she hates paperwork and i am "bookish".
Only if he has authority to act as her agent by virtue of a valid power of attorney.
To sign the back of a check is to endorse it.
No, you cannot sign a check on behalf of your husband unless you have been granted power of attorney or have a joint account with him.
No, you cannot sign your name on your husband's check unless you are listed as a joint account holder or have power of attorney.
To properly make a check out to cash, simply write "Cash" on the "Pay to the Order of" line. Be sure to sign the check on the signature line to authorize it.
If the check has the word 'or' between the names, it can be cashed by you. If it has 'and/or' you can cash it alone. Try depositing the check, rather than cashing it; then take out the money.
Only if he has authority to act as her agent by virtue of a valid power of attorney.
Not if the wife's name is on the title. She is the only one who can sell the car.
The bank may accept it. They are more likely to allow him to deposit the check in her account rather than cash it.
To sign the back of a check is to endorse it.
No, you cannot cash an unsigned check.
No, you cannot sign a check on behalf of your husband unless you have been granted power of attorney or have a joint account with him.
No, you cannot sign your name on your husband's check unless you are listed as a joint account holder or have power of attorney.
sign it, bring it to bank
The person or company the check is made out to. No one else can cash it. The person you wrote it to can endorse the check to someone else so they can cash it.
You should not have to if it is signed to "cash" Yes, any check that you are looking to cash/deposit must have a signature.
To properly make a check out to cash, simply write "Cash" on the "Pay to the Order of" line. Be sure to sign the check on the signature line to authorize it.