Accountants for Mainland Catering Service encountered the following situations while adjusting and closing the books at December

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Accountants for Mainland Catering Service encountered the following situations while adjusting and closing the books at December 31. Consider each situation independently.

a. The company bookkeeper made the following entry to record a $4,900 credit purchase of office equipment:

Accountants for Mainland Catering Service encountered the following situations while

1. Correct the error by reversing the incorrect entry and preparing the correct entry on December 31. Include an explanation.
2. Prepare the correcting entry, dated December 31, without reversing the incorrect entry. Include an explanation.
b. A $9,000 credit to Accounts Receivable was posted as a debit.
1. At what stage of the accounting cycle will this error be detected?
2. Describe the technique for identifying the amount of the error.
c. The $88,500 balance of Equipment was entered as $8,850 on the trial balance.
1. What is the name of this type of error?
2. Assume this is the only error in the trial balance. Which will be greater, the total debits or the total credits, and by how much?
3. How can this type of error be identified?
d. The accountant failed to make the following adjusting entries at December 31:
1. Accrued property tax expense, $3,400.
2. Supplies expense, $8,080.
3. Accrued interest revenue on a note receivable, $7,800.
4. Amortization of equipment, $11,400.
5. Earned service revenue that had been collected in advance, $15,300.
Compute the overall net income effect of these omissions.
e. Record each of the adjusting entries identified in item d. Include an explanation.
f. The revenue and expense accounts, after the adjusting entries had been posted, were Service Revenue, $115,200; Interest Revenue, $9,000; Salary Expense, $25,380; Rent Expense, $7,650; and Amortization Expense, $12,320. Two balances prior to closing were S. Jones, Capital, $72,900, and S. Jones, Withdrawals, $45,000. Journalize the closing entries. Include explanations.

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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Related Book For  book-img-for-question

Horngrens Accounting

ISBN: 978-0133855371

10th Canadian edition Volume 1

Authors: Tracie L. Miller Nobles, Brenda L. Mattison, Ella Mae Matsumura, Carol A. Meissner, Jo Ann L. Johnston, Peter R. Norwood

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