LdiJ
Senior Member
The bolded is definitely a valid issue, but I wonder if any DA has ever been willing to prosecute a spouse for opening their spouses mail?Sorry, Zig, but you're wrong. Just a couple of examples where a check can not simply be deposited into a joint account:
1. Conditional endorsement. Some insurance checks come with the condition that only the person named on the check can cash or deposit it. That makes it conditional - and if someone else deposits it, they are committing fraud.
2. Restrictive endorsement. Similar result.
3. Unauthorized Endorsement. If ex didn't have permission to sign and signed OP's name and did so anyway, that's illegal:
https://www.megadox.com/d/1709
At least one site indicates that Prudential does use restrictive endorsements on their retirement checks.
And, of course, that doesn't even address the issue of illegally opening someone else's mail.
I found one case by googling of a spouse that is facing felony charges for hacking his wife's email after she filed for divorce, but I haven't seen anything that indicates that anyone has been charged with opening a spouse's regular mail, before they filed for divorce.