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  2. Stop Payment: What It Is and How It Works - AOL

    www.aol.com/stop-payment-works-151837400.html

    Wondering what is a stop payment and how does it work? Learn all the details about stop payments with this guide.

  3. Stop payment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stop_payment

    A stop payment is an order by a customer of a financial institution (bank, savings bank, or credit union) or to a money order issuer to refuse to pay a check or draft drawn on the customer's account, and to return the draft to the depositor unpaid. [1] Stop payments are used in cases where the depositor does not want the check to be paid.

  4. Online banking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Online_banking

    The facility may also enable the customer to order a cheque book, statements, report loss of credit cards, stop payment on a cheque, advise change of address and other routine actions. Some financial institutions offer special internet banking services, for example, Personal financial management support, such as importing data into personal ...

  5. Standing order (banking) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standing_order_(banking)

    It has banned standing / banker's orders, along with direct debit and any type of recurring payments between bank accounts. Instead, it permits transfer of funds only via its own “Interac e-Transfer”, an electronic transfer system similar to a cheque, which may be sent manually to a recipient's email or phone number.

  6. Deposit slip - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deposit_slip

    The categories include type of item, and if it is a cheque or cash and which bank it is from, such as a local bank or not. The bank teller keeps the deposit slip along with the deposit (cash and cheques), and provides the depositor with a receipt.

  7. Dishonoured cheque - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dishonoured_cheque

    A dishonoured cheque (US spelling: dishonored check) is a cheque that the bank on which it is drawn declines to pay (“honour”). There are a number of reasons why a bank might refuse to honour a cheque, with non-sufficient funds ( NSF ) being the most common, indicating that there are insufficient cleared funds in the account on which the ...

  8. Payment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Payment

    A payment by cheque is normally deemed to occur when the cheque is delivered, as long as the cheque is honoured on the presentation by the payee. This rule also generally applies where the cheque is not presented to the bank until the next taxable year, even though the payer could stop payment on the cheque, in the meantime. [10]

  9. Cheque clearing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cheque_clearing

    Cheque clearing (or check clearing in American English) or bank clearance is the process of moving cash (or its equivalent) from the bank on which a cheque is drawn to the bank in which it was deposited, usually accompanied by the movement of the cheque to the paying bank, either in the traditional physical paper form or digitally under a cheque truncation system.