Concept explainers
(a)
Owner withdrawals:
Owner withdrawals refer to the withdrawals of money by the owner from the business for his/her personal use. This decreases the owner’s equity account. As owner’s drawing account is increased by debits, and decreased by credits, it has a normal debit balance.
To discuss: The cause of the unusual balance of the cash account with a credit balance of $1,850, assuming that no errors have occurred during journalizing, and posting.
(b)
To identify: Whether the credit balance of $1,850 in the cash account is an asset, a liability, owner’s equity, revenue, or an expense.
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Chapter 2 Solutions
Bundle: Accounting, Chapters 1-13, 26th + Working Papers, Chapters 1-17 For Warren/reeve/duchac's Accounting, 26th And Financial Accounting, 14th + ... For Warren/reeve/duchac's Accounting, 26th
- Requirement 1: ABC Company adheres to a policy of depositing all cash receipts in a bank account and making all payments by check. The cash account as of December 31 has a credit balance of $1,850, and there is no undeposited cash on hand. (a) Assuming that no errors occurred during journalizing or posting, what caused this unusual balance? (b) Is the $1,850 credit balance in the cash account an asset, a liability, owner's equity, a revenue, or an expense? Requirement 2: Assume that DEF Company erroneously recorded the payment of $7,500 of owner withdrawals as a debit to Salary Expense. (a) How would this error affect the equality of the trial balance? (b) How would this error affect the income statement, statement of owner's equity, and balance sheet?arrow_forwardThe bank mistakenly recorded the collection of $385 on a customer account as $358 in the bank statement. The cheque was written in the correct amount and was correctly recorded in the company’s accounting system. The journal entry required to correct this error would be: Select one: a. debit Accounts Receivable, $385; credit Cash, $385 b. debit Cash, $27; credit Accounts Receivable, $27 c. debit Cash, $385; credit Accounts Receivable, $385 d. debit Accounts Receivable, $27; credit Cash, $27 e. no journal entry is requiredarrow_forwardRyan Company deposits all cash receipts on the day they are received and makes all cash payments by check. Ryan's June bank statement shows a $29.361 balance in the bank. Ryan's comparison of the bank statement to its cash account revealed the following: Deposit in transit Outstanding checks Multiple Choice Additionally, a $49 check written and recorded by the company was incorrectly recorded by the bank as a $94 deduction. The adjusted cash balance per the bank records should be: O O O $31,580 $31,535 $34,487 $31,625 3,650 1,431 $24,325 Seved (?)arrow_forward
- Ryan Company deposits all cash receipts on the day they are received and makes all cash payments by check. Ryan's June bank statement shows a $29,361 balance in the bank. Ryan's comparison of the bank statement to its cash account revealed the following: Deposit in transit Outstanding checks Multiple Choice Additionally, a $49 check written and recorded by the company was incorrectly recorded by the bank as a $94 deduction. The adjusted cash balance per the bank records should be: O O $31,580 $31,535 $34,487 $31,625 3,650 1,431 $24.325 H Seved Oarrow_forwardAssuming none of the transactions reported by the bank debit or credit memos have been recorded by the company, which of the following reconciling items (a through g) require an entry on the company's books? a. checks outstanding totaled $7,250 b. a deposit of $12,000 representing cash receipts of May 31 had been made too late to appear on the May 31 bank statement. c. the bank collected a note on behalf of the company in the amount of $3,500. d. a check for $270 had been incorrectly charged by the bank as $720 as shown on the bank statement. e. a check for $420 returned with the bank statement had been recorded incorrectly on the company's books as $240. f. bank service charges for May amounted to $175 g. a deposited check from May 24 for $1,200 was rejected by the bank due to insufficient funds Please select the applicable letters of each item to be journalized by the company and enter them below. Separate each item by a comma.arrow_forwardAnalyze the following errors that appeared on Black Electric’s bank statement and in the accounting records: a. The bank recorded a deposit of $30 as $300. b. The company’s bookkeeper mistakenly recorded a deposit of $250 as $520. c. The company’s bookkeeper mistakenly recorded a payment of $450 received from a customer as $540 on the bank deposit slip. The bank caught the error and made the deposit for the correct amount. d. The bank statement shows a check that was written by the company for $392 was erroneously paid (cleared the account) as $329. e. The bookkeeper wrote a check for $275 but erroneously wrote down $257 as the cash disbursement in the company’s records. Requirement For each error, describe how the correction would be shown on the company’s bank reconciliation.arrow_forward
- On March 31, 2021 the bank column of the cashbook of showed a credit balance of P118,100 (Overdraft). On examining of the cash book and the bank statement, it was found that: a) Cheques received and recorded in the cashbook but not sent to the bank of collection P12,400. b) Payment received from a customer directly by the bank P27,300 but no entry was made in the cashbook. c) Cheques issued for P175,200 not presented for payment. d) Interest of P8,800 charged by the bank was not entered in the cashbook. Prepare bank reconciliation statement.arrow_forwardThe Cash account of ReeseCorporation had a balance of $3,540 at October 31, 2018. Included were outstanding checkstotaling $1,800 and an October 31 deposit of $300 that did not appear on the bank statement.The bank statement, which came from Turnstone State Bank, listed an October 31 balance of$5,570. Included in the bank balance was an October 30 collection of $600 on account froma customer who pays the bank directly. The bank statement also showed a $30 service charge,$10 of interest revenue that Reese earned on its bank balance, and an NSF check for $50.Prepare a bank reconciliation to determine how much cash Reese actually had at October 31.arrow_forwardDuring the month of July, Clanton Industries Issued a check in the amount of $923 to a supplier on account. The check did not clear the bank during July. In preparing the July 31 bank reconciliation, the company should: Multiple Choice Add the check amount to the bank balance. O Make a journal entry in the company records for an error. Add the check amount to the book balance of cash. O Deduct the check amount from the bank balance. 0. Deduct the check amount from the book balance of cash.arrow_forward
- Survey of Accounting (Accounting I)AccountingISBN:9781305961883Author:Carl WarrenPublisher:Cengage LearningFinancial AccountingAccountingISBN:9781337272124Author:Carl Warren, James M. Reeve, Jonathan DuchacPublisher:Cengage Learning
- College Accounting (Book Only): A Career ApproachAccountingISBN:9781337280570Author:Scott, Cathy J.Publisher:South-Western College Pub
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