Cookie Mejias, owner of Mejias Company, asked her bookkeeper how each of the following situations will affect

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Cookie Mejias, owner of Mejias Company, asked her bookkeeper how each of the following situations will affect the totals of the trial balance and individual ledger accounts.
◆ An $850 payment for a desk was recorded as a debit to Office Equipment, $85, and a credit to Cash, $85.
◆ A payment of $300 to a creditor was recorded as a debit to Accounts Payable, $300, and a credit to Cash, $100.
◆ An Accounts Receivable collection of $400 was recorded as a debit to Cash, $400, and a credit to C. Mejias, Capital, $400.
◆ The payment of a liability of $400 was recorded as a debit to Accounts Payable, $40, and a credit to Supplies, $40.
◆ A purchase of equipment for $800 was recorded as a debit to Supplies, $800, and a credit to Cash, $800.
◆ A payment of $95 to a creditor was recorded as a debit to Accounts Payable, $95, and a credit to Cash, $59.
What did the bookkeeper tell Cookie? Which accounts were overstated and which were understated? Which were correct? Explain in writing how mistakes can be avoided in the future.
Accounts Receivable
Accounts receivables are debts owed to your company, usually from sales on credit. Accounts receivable is business asset, the sum of the money owed to you by customers who haven’t paid.The standard procedure in business-to-business sales is that...
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College Accounting A Practical Approach

ISBN: 978-0132564441

11th Canadian Edition

Authors: Jeffrey Slater, Brian Zwicker

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