Concept explainers
(a)
Liability
Liability is an obligation of the business to pay to the creditors in future for the goods and services purchased on account or any for other financial benefit received. It can be current liability or a non-current liability depending upon the time period in which it is paid.
To classify: A notes payable for $100,000 due in 2 years is a current liability or noncurrent liability or both.
(b)
To classify: A 10 years mortgage payable of $200,000, payable in ten $20,000 annual payments is a current liability or noncurrent liability or both.
(c)
To classify: Interest payable of $15,000 on the mortgage is a current liability or noncurrent liability or both.
(d)
To classify: Accounts payable of $60,000 is a current liability or noncurrent liability or both.
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FINANCIAL ACCOUNTING (MWSU) W/ACCESS
- The Company issued a short-term debt of $65,000 on July 1, 2021 for a period of 5 months with a note payable of 14% interest. The company uses the accounting period on a quarterly basis. Required: Prepare the journal entries needed to record the issuance of the debt, recognize interest expense, and pay off the debt as it matures. Note: Include the current method of processing and the excel formulaarrow_forwardThe following amortization schedule indicates the interest and principal that Chip's Cookie Corporation (CCC) must repay on an installment note established January 1, 2021. CCC has a December 31 year-end and makes the required annual payments on December 31. Year 1 2 3 4 Total Beginning Notes Payable 52,000 40,629 28, 235 14,725 Repaid Principal Interest Expense on Notes Payable (a) Annual Payment (b) Interest Expense (c) Notes Payable (d-1) Total Interest (d-2) Total Principal 4,680 3,657 2,541 1,325 12, 203 11,371 12,394 13,510 14,725 52,000 Ending Notes Payable 40,629 28,235 14,725 0 Use the amortization schedule to determine (a) the amount of the (rounded) annual payment; (b) the amount of interest expense to report in the year ended December 31, 2021 (Year 1); (c) the note payable balance at January 1, 2024; and (d) the total interest and total principal paid over the note's entire life. (Round your answers to the nearest whole dollar amount.)arrow_forwardThe following amortization schedule indicates the interest and principal that Chip’s Cookie Corporation (CCC) must repay on an installment note established January 1, 2021. CCC has a December 31 year-end and makes the required annual payments on December 31. Year Beginning Notes Payable Interest Expense Repaid Principal on Notes Payable Ending Notes Payable 1 39,000 2,730 8,784 30,216 2 30,216 2,115 9,399 20,817 3 20,817 1,457 10,057 10,760 4 10,760 753 10,760 0 Total 7,055 39,000 Use the amortization schedule to determine (a) the amount of the (rounded) annual payment; (b) the amount of interest expense to report in the year ended December 31, 2021 (Year 1); (c) the note payable balance at January 1, 2024; and (d) the total interest and total principal paid over the note’s entire life. (Round your answers to the nearest whole dollar amount.)arrow_forward
- Constellation Corp. reported the following liability balances on December 31, 2021: 10% note payable issued on October 1, 2020, maturing October 1, 2022... 12% note payable issued on March 1, 2020, on March 1, 2022.... .P 2,000,000 4,000,000 The 2021 financial statements were issued on March 31, 2022. Under the loan agreement, the entity has the right on December 31, 2021 to roll over the 10% note payable for at least 12 months after December 31, 2021. On March 1, 2022, entire P 4,000,000 balance of the 12% note payable was refinanced through issuance of a long-term obligation payable lump-sum. What amount of the notes payable should be classified as current on December 31, 2021?arrow_forwardJamison Company has the following obligations at December 31:For each obligation, indicate whether it should be classified as a current liability. (Assume an operating cycle of less than one year.) 1. (a) A note payable for $100,000 due in 2 years. Not a current liabilityCurrent liability (b) A 10-year mortgage payable of $300,000 payable in ten $30,000 annual payments. Not a current liabilityCurrent liability (c) Interest payable of $15,000 on the mortgage. Current liabilityNot a current liability (d) Accounts payable of $60,000.arrow_forwardTaken from the records of Care Company as of December 31, 2021 are the following information: Long-term debt of P10,000,000 dated January 1, 2014 due December 31, 2022. Albano expects to refinance this liability on a long-term basis on January 2022. The financing agreement was consummated on February 2, 2022. Note payable due on January 1, 2024 amounting to P6,000,000. The note is payable on demand. Bank loan of P14,000,000 due December 31, 2026 wherein a breach of loan covenant was committed by Albano during 2021. The bank agreed on December 31, 2021 to provide Sayonara a grace period to rectify the breach ending December 31, 2022. Serial bonds dated January 8, 2021 totalling P10,000,000 payable in 10 annual instalments. 5. How much would be included in the current liabilities section of Care’s year-end financial statement?arrow_forward
- Remo Company reported the following liability balances on December 31, 2022: 12% note payable issued on October 1, 2021, maturing on October 1, 2023 - P2,000,000 10% note payable issued on March 1, 2021, maturing on March 1, 2023 - P4,000,000 The 2022 financial statements were issued on March 31, 2023. Under the loan agreement for the 12% note payable, the entity has the discretion to refinance the obligation for at least twelve months after December 31, 2022. On March 1, 2023, the entire P4,000,000 balance of the 10% note payable was refinanced through the issuance of a long-term obligation payable lump sum. What amount of the notes payable should be classified as noncurrent on December 31, 2022? A) P2,000,000 B) P6,000,000 P4,000,000 POarrow_forwardJamison Company has the following obligations at December 31: For each obligation, indicate whether it should be classified as a current liability. (Assume an operating cycle of less than one year.) Obligations (a) Anote payable for $100,000 due in 2 years. (b) A 10-year mortgage payable of $300,000 payable in ten $30,000 annual payments. (c) Interest payable of $15,000 on the mortgage. (d) Accounts payable of $60.000.arrow_forwardOn January 1, Patterson Inc. borrowed $1,000,000 on a 10%, 15‑year mortgage note payable. The note is to be repaid in equal semiannual installments of $65,051 (payable on June 30 and December 31). Each mortgage payment includes principal and interest. Interest is computed using the effective interest method. Indicate the financial statement effects using the template for (a) issuance of the mortgage note payable, (b) payment of the first installment on June 30, and (c) payment of the second installment on December 31. I have some attempts in the chart attached by I do not know if its correct.arrow_forward
- Canton Cave Company provided the following schedule of liabilities on December 31, 2019: Accounts payable Notes payable-bank Interest payable Mortgage payable-10% Bonds payable *Bank notes payable include two separate notes payable to First Bank > AP3, 000,000, 10% note issued March 1, 2018, payable on demand. Interest is payable every six 6,500,000 8,000,000 150,000 2,000,000 4,000,000 months. > A one-year, P5,000,000, 11% note issued January 2, 2019. On December 31, 2019, Canton Cave negotiated a written agreement with First Bank to replace the note with a 2-year, P5,000,000, 10% note issued January 2, 2020. *The 10% mortgage note was issued October 1, 2016 with a term of 10 years. > Terms of the note give the holder the right to demand immediate payment if the entity fails to make a monthly interest within 10 days of the date the payment is due. On December 31, 2019, Canton Cave is three months behind in paying its required initial payment. The bonds payable are 10-year, 8% bonds,…arrow_forwardLechon Corporation has multiple long-term arrangement containing a debt covenant. As of December 31, 2022, the company disclosed current liabilities of P450,786 in its financial statements. The following notes refer to these six (6) long-term loans each amounting to P75,131:Note 1: The specific requirements in the debt covenant have to be met as at December 31 every year. The loan is due in 3 years. The company breaches the debt covenant before the period end. As a result, the loan becomes payable on demand.Note 2: Same details in note 1, but the loan arrangement stipulates that the entity has a grace period of 3 months to rectify the breach and during which the lender cannot demand immediate repayment.Note 3: Same details in note 1, but the lender agreed not to demand repayment as a consequence of the breach. The company obtains this waiver on December 31 and the waiver is for a period of more than 12 months after the period end. Note 4: Same details in note 3, however the company…arrow_forwardThe Company issued a short-term debt of $65,000 on July 1, 2021 for a period of 5 months with a note payable of 14% interest. The company uses the accounting period on a quarterly basis. Required: Prepare the journal entries needed to record the issuance of the debt, recognize interest expense, matures. and pay off the debt as it Note: Include the current method of processing and the excel formulas from start to finish!arrow_forward
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