US bills are printed in at least 3 separate stages, so the error you describe could happen if a set of bills accidentally fails to go through one of the phases or is flipped over so the seal is printed on the other side.
In any case these are considered to be major printing errors and could be worth several times face value. You'll need to check with an expert on paper money who can look at your bill in person for a more specific valuation.
To set the value of the dollar
The National Treasury, I believe.
If the dollar bill, or any US Treasury note for that matter, is still recognizable than the treasury will still accept its value. Recognizable to you and me may differ. I remember a History Channel episode where a bunch of ashes were brough in, but the marking bans of the value and the tresury were intact so they were still valuable...
$1
The value of a two dollar bill is dependent upon the color of the treasury seal. A green treasury seal is more common and valued at face-value, a red treasury seal deems the note collectible, however the value varies with the condition.
No. A dollar is a dollar between banks and the Treasury.
The first Australian Two Hundred Dollar coins were issued in 1980.
Is there a cash value on a 1954 100 hundred dollar canadian bill as of this day
a hundred dollars.
five-hundred dollars
one hundred Canadian dollars
one hundred cents. one dollar