In pennsylvania am I required to provide a copy of the front and rear legs of a check when requested?



Answers:

If you do not show the front of the check, no one know if you wrote one. If you do not show the back of the check, not a soul knows if the check be actually received and deposited by the human being you should have salaried with the check. It's particularly reasonable to show front and vertebrae of any check.
It makes sense to provide both sides, regardless of who asks you, because the rear shows exactly who cashed it and when.
Only if they are saying you didn't income. The front shows how much you paid, and when, and the spinal column shows which account it be deposited in, and verify that it didn't bounce.
The examine is a bit open-ended. It depends, of course, upon the principle for the request. You cannot be compelled to provide any copies of any checks without a biddable reason. Normally you merely need to produce a copy of a check within order to demonstrate that you own paid for an item. If you stipulation it for that purpose, the front of the check will only demonstrate to whom it be made payable, and a date and amount. The back of the check will provide information to demonstrate that it be actually negotiate. This is necessary to show that you did more than a moment ago make out the check, but that it be actually negotiate, and, therefore, that the purpose for which the check be drawn has be fulfilled.
A personal check from your account? OR, a check from your employer?


Usually the front, because in that is a bar-code and/or a numeric code there.