Certified mail is mail that is designed to ensure it gets to its proper recipient. Generally when someone sends a certified letter, he wants to ensure that it gets to the recipient and a receipt signed by the recipient at the time the letter was delivered is sent back to the sender, giving the sender a record that such mail has been delivered.
i got a usps for to pick up certified mail but it was close is it bad news to get a certified mail.
yes :)
Certified mail requires you to sign for the mail. To know who sent the certified mail, you usually need to sign for it but the sender's name is typically listed on the green card attached to the mail. You can ask to look at the card before signing and if you miss the delivery, you can look at the slip the mail carrier leaves for you that lets you know you had a certified letter or package.
The cost of certified mail will be determined by the weight and where it is being sent. The average cost for this type of mail is five dollars.
The cost of certified mail will be determined by the weight and where it is being sent. The average cost for this type of mail is five dollars.
C-mail. It sends you updates from the game.
There are several benefits to sending something by certified mail. By it's very nature, certified mail is signed for by a recipient, and this provides a paper trail should something go wrong. Certified mail also provides a certain amount of insurance value to the item being posted, and lastly, certified mail often takes less time to be delivered than mail sent in a standard way.
When ANYONE sends certified mail they receive a return card, normally a green one. This becomes proof that a certified mail has been sent and the recipient has received it. The sender can then proceed to the next legal step.
Take the item to your post office and tell them you would like to add Certified Mail service. You'll have to pay a fee, in addition to regular postage.
Not always. It can be though. ------------------ certified mail has nothing to do with the contents. It means the sender wants the delivery and receipt of the mail verified b the the U.S. Post Office. Sometimes certified mail is good news sometimes it is bad news.
Unless sent certified (requiring receiver to sign for mail) it is your word against theirs that such mail was sent and received. It is a "CYA" if you will and hold's water in a court of law.