Presented below are the purchases and cash payments journals for Fornelli Co. for its first month of

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Presented below are the purchases and cash payments journals for Fornelli Co. for its first month of operations.


Presented below are the purchases and cash payments journals for


In addition, the following transactions have not been journalized for July. The cost of all merchandise sold was 65% of the sales price.
July 1 The founder, N. Fornelli, invests $80,000 in cash.
6 Sell merchandise on account to Dow Co. $6,200 terms 1/10, n/30.
7 Make cash sales totaling $8,000.
8 Sell merchandise on account to S. Goebel $4,600, terms 1/10, n/30.
10 Sell merchandise on account to W. Leiss $4,900, terms 1/10, n/30.
13 Receive payment in full from S. Goebel.
16 Receive payment in full from W. Leiss.
20 Receive payment in full from Dow Co.
21 Sell merchandise on account to H. Kenney $5,000, terms 1/10, n/30.
29 Returned damaged goods to N. Alvarado and received cash refund of $420.

Instructions
(a) Open the following accounts in the general ledger.
101 Cash
112 Accounts Receivable
120
Inventory
126 Supplies
131 Prepaid Rent
201 Accounts Payable
301 Owner’s Capital
306 Owner’s Drawings
401 Sales Revenue
414 Sales Discounts
505 Cost of Goods Sold
631 Supplies Expense
729 Rent Expense
(b) Journalize the transactions that have not been journalized in the sales journal and the cash receipts journal (see Illustration 7-9).
(c) Post to the accounts receivable and accounts payable subsidiary ledgers. Follow the sequence of transactions as shown in the problem.
(d) Post the individual entries and totals to the general ledger.
(e) Prepare a trial balance at July 31, 2014.
(f) Determine whether the subsidiary ledgers agree with the control accounts in the general ledger.
(g) The following adjustments at the end of July are necessary.
(1) A count of supplies indicates that $140 is still on hand.
(2) Recognize rent expense for July, $500.
Prepare the necessary entries in the general journal. Post the entries to the general ledger.
(h) Prepare an adjusted trial balance at July 31,2014.

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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Accounting Principles

ISBN: 9781118566671

11th Edition

Authors: Jerry Weygandt, Paul Kimmel, Donald Kieso

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