On account of. Normally on behalf of a deceased person. Courtesy of Timber Cash of Oakland, CA
You can not.
No one will or should cash your state refund check or any check for that matter without a valid non-expired picture id or ids.
Where to cash a check thirty days old
You will not get a cash refund. You will get your check back if it is the same day. Otherwise, the store will wait until your check has cleared the bank to make certain you have the money to buy the product. Otherwise, you will be charged for an overdrawn check and prosecuted by the company.
Yes, If you are the executor of the deceased, legal heir or have other appropriate power of attorney to do so, you can deposit the refund check.
On account of. Normally on behalf of a deceased person. Courtesy of Timber Cash of Oakland, CA
You can not.
No one will or should cash your state refund check or any check for that matter without a valid non-expired picture id or ids.
Where to cash a check thirty days old
You will not get a cash refund. You will get your check back if it is the same day. Otherwise, the store will wait until your check has cleared the bank to make certain you have the money to buy the product. Otherwise, you will be charged for an overdrawn check and prosecuted by the company.
It is highly unlikely that a bank will cash a check written by a deceased person. The bank has no way to verify that the check was written before the death.
Power of Attorney EXPIRES when the person who gave power to another is deceased. Unless the person that had the power is also the executor of the estate, then it could be fraud.
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 in case of a joint account.
DO NOT send them the IRS refund check under any circumstances. An IRS refund is considered an asset and should be relinquished to the probate court as such. If the state does not require probate procedures in this specific case, contact the IRS office for instructions on the proper procedure concerning the refund. Do not endorse the check or attempt to cash or deposit it in an account. And file a FDCPA complaint against the credit card company that told you that.
As long as there are enough funds in the account that the check is being drawn from to cover the amount of said check and that YOU would have the legal right to withdraw funds from that account. Yes.