When you write the check to another person, that person endorses the back when they cash it. If you write a check to "Cash", the bank may require that you endorse it before they will cash it.
If you are the maker of the check - that is, the person who is writing the check to pay someone else - you should sign on the front of the check and NOT on the back. The back of the check is for the payee's endorsement. The front of the check has a signature line for the maker to sign.
No nobody can make a check for you not even your company
Yes, you can sign over a government check to someone else by endorsing the back of the check with your signature and writing "Pay to the order of recipient's name" above your signature.
To sign the back of a check is to endorse it.
Yes, it is possible to sign over a cashier's check to someone else by endorsing the back of the check with your signature and writing "Pay to the order of the other person's name" above your signature.
If it is made payable to you, yes. If you are the remitter (purchaser - person paying with the check), no.
You should sign the back of the check on the designated line.
Yes, you typically need to sign the back of a check in order to deposit it.
Yes, you typically need to sign the back of a check in order to deposit it.
Yes, you typically need to sign the back of a check in order to deposit it.
Yes, it is typically necessary to sign the back of a check before depositing or cashing it.
If you're writing the check to get cash from your account you can simply write "Cash" in the payee line. If you've already filled the check out with your name as payee and you are writing the check from your account, just sign the back of the check as your normally would endorse. :)