Transactions related to revenue and cash receipts completed by Sterling Engineering Services during the period June 2-30,

Question:

Transactions related to revenue and cash receipts completed by Sterling Engineering Services during the period June 2-30, 2016, are as follows:

June 2. Issued Invoice No. 717 to Yee Co., $1,430.

3. Received cash from Auto-Flex Co. for the balance owed on its account.

7. Issued Invoice No. 718 to Cooper Development Co., $670.

10. Issued Invoice No. 719 to Ridge Communities, $2,840.

Post revenue and collections to the accounts receivable subsidiary ledger.

14. Received cash from Cooper Development Co. for the balance owed on June 1.

16. Issued Invoice No. 720 to Cooper Development Co., $400.

Post revenue and collections to the accounts receivable subsidiary ledger.

18. Received cash from Yee Co. for the balance due on invoice of June 2.

20. Received cash from Cooper Development Co. for invoice of June 7.

23. Issued Invoice No. 721 to Auto-Flex Co., $860.

30. Recorded cash fees earned, $4,520.

30. Received office equipment of $1,800 in partial settlement of balance due on the

Ridge Communities account.

Post revenue and collections to the accounts receivable subsidiary ledger.

Instructions

1. Insert the following balances in the general ledger as of June 1:

11 Cash................................... $18,340

12 Accounts Receivable.................. 2,650

18 Office Equipment.....................34,700

41 Fees Earned................................ -

2. Insert the following balances in the accounts receivable subsidiary ledger as of June 1:

Auto-Flex Co.............................. $1,670

Cooper Development Co.....................980

Ridge Communities............................-

Yee Co...........................................-

3. Prepare a single-column revenue journal (p. 40) and a cash receipts journal (p. 36).

Use the following column headings for the cash receipts journal: Fees Earned Cr., Accounts Receivable Cr., and Cash Dr. The Fees Earned column is used to record cash fees. Insert a check mark (¸) in the Post. Ref. column when recording cash fees.

4. Using the two special journals and the two-column general journal (p. 1), journalize the transactions for June. Post to the accounts receivable subsidiary ledger, and insert the balances at the points indicated in the narrative of transactions. Determine the balance in the customer's account before recording a cash receipt.

5. Total each of the columns of the special journals, and post the individual entries and totals to the general ledger. Insert account balances after the last posting.

6. Determine that the sum of the customer accounts agrees with the accounts receivable controlling account in the general ledger.

7. Why would an automated system omit postings to a control account as performed in step 5 for Accounts Receivable?

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  answer-question

Financial Accounting

ISBN: 978-1305088436

14th edition

Authors: Carl S. Warren, Jim Reeve, Jonathan Duchac

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