Case summary:
A medium sized manufacturing firm, KC Inc. has sold their clothes to their more than ten year old purchaser who runs a departmental store in the name of RB departmental store. The goods were sold two weeks ago on credit. The President of KC Inc. heard news about RB departmental store that its management is suffering from financial loss. Due to this RB departmental store’s management is planning for reorganization or liquidation with federal bankruptcy court. The president is worried about the receivables and also wants to know more about proceedings for bankruptcy, reorganization and liquidation for which the person asked their Chief financial officer to brief about.
To determine: The priority of claims as per chapter 7 liquidation.
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionChapter 24 Solutions
EBK FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT: THEORY & PRAC
- Two years ago the manager of a large department store purchased new bar code scanners costing $39,000. A salesperson recently tried to sell the manager a new computer-integrated checkout system for the store. Thenew system would save the store a substantial amount of money each year. The recently purchased scanners could be sold in the secondhand market for $19,000. The store manager refused to listen to the salesperson,saying, “I just bought those scanners. I can’t get rid of them until I get my money’s worth out of them.” (a) What type of cost is the cost of purchasing the old bar code scanners? (b) What common behavioral tendencyis the manager exhibiting?arrow_forwardJenny operated a small shop selling hygienic supplies and bought facial masks worth $15,000 from the supplier, Amy. Jenny visited Amy’s office and gave Amy an uncrossed bearer cheque for full payment. When Amy finished her job and rushed to meet her customer by taking the MTR, she lost the cheque somewhere on the way accidentally. William found the cheque left on the floor of the MTR platform and picked it up. William was unemployed for six months and needed $15,000 to pay this month rent. After noticing the characteristic of this cheque, this was a bearer cheque. William took this bearer cheque to Isaac, his landlord, to pay this month’s rent of $15,000.Isaac deposited this cheque to her ABC Bank. The cheque was duly cleared through the Isaac’s bank and paid by Jenny’s CDE Bank. a) Explain how to apply “Holder in Due Course” (HIDC) in this case. b) Who is the true owner of this cheque from three parties of Amy, William and Isaac?c) If the cheque was crossed and the words “not…arrow_forwardTimothy Carter went out to eat with his girlfriend at a fancy restaurant. When he tried to pay the bill with his Mastercard credit card, he was told that the restaurant accepted only cash or American Express. His waiter suggested that he use the ATM across the street to withdraw cash using his credit card. Tim did as suggested and didn't pay attention to any fees until he received his credit card statement one month later. He was shocked to see the total fees (3.5 percent cash advance), and his APR was increased to 20.0 %. Given the cost of the meal ($150) plus the associated fees, how much did his meal cost him? Multiple Choicearrow_forward
- Electronics, Inc. is a high-volume, wholesale merchandising company. Most of its inventory turns over four or five times a year. The company has had 50 units of a particular band of computers on hand for over a year. These computers have not sold and probably will not sell unless they are discounted 60 to 70%. The accountant is carrying them on the books at cost and intends to recognize the loss when they are sold. This way, she can avoid a significant write-down in inventory on the current year's financial statements. Is the accountant correct in her treatment of the inventory? Why or why not? can you help me explain this?arrow_forwardThe Dotson Company, owner of Bleacher Mall, charges Rich Clothing Store a rental fee of $600 per month plus 5% of yearly profits over $500,000. Matt Rich, the owner of the store, directs his accountant, Ron Hamilton, to increase the estimate of bad debt expense and warranty costs in order to keep profits at $475,000. Instructions Answer the following questions. a. Should Hamilton follow his boss’s directive?. b. Who is harmed if the estimates are increased? c. Is Matt Rich’s directive ethical?arrow_forwardRecently, the owner of a Trader Joe's franchise decided to change how she compensated her top manager. Last year, she paid him a fixed salary of $65,000, and her store made $120,000 in profits (not counting payment to her top manager). She suspected the store could do much better and feared the fixed salary was causing her top manager to shirk on the job. Therefore, this year she decided to offer him a fixed salary of $30,000 plus 15 percent of the store's profits. Since the change, the store is performing much better, and she forecasts profits this year to be $280,000 (again, not counting the payment to her top manager). Assuming the change in compensation is the reason for the increased profits, and that the forecast is accurate, (a) Which compensation method (the old one or the new one) will the manager prefer? Please explain why. (b) Which compensation method (the old one or the new one) would the owner of the franchise prefer? Please explain why. (c) If there was another…arrow_forward
- Justin Granovsky, an assistant manager at a small retail shop in Morgantown, West Virginia, has an unusual amount of debt. He owes $5,400 to one bank, $1,800 to a clothing store, $2,700 to his credit union, and several hundred dollars to other stores and individuals. Justin is paying more than $460 per month on the three major obligations to pay them off when due in two years. He realized that his take-home pay of slightly more than $3,100 per month did not leave him with much excess cash. Justin discussed a different way of handling his major payments with his bank’s loan of-ficer. The officer suggested that Justin pool all of his debts and take out an $11,000 debt-consolidation loan for seven years at 14 percent interest. As a result, he would pay only $250 per month for all his debts. Justin seemed ecstatic over the idea. (a) Is Justin’s enthusiasm over the idea of a debt-consolidation loan justified? Why or why not? (b) Why can the bank offer such a “good deal” to Justin?…arrow_forwardAlan purchased shoes from Barbara on open account. Barbara sent Alan a bill for $10,000. Alan wrote back that two hundred pairs of the shoes were defective and offered to pay $6,000 and give Barbara his promissory note for $1,000. Barbara accepted the offer, and Alan sent his check for $6,000 and his note, in accordance with the agreement. Barbara cashed the check, collected on the note, and one month later sued Alan for $3,000. Is Barbara bound by her acceptance of the offer?arrow_forwardMeiMei is a professional accountant employed by The American Company Bhd since Mei really needs this job as he has a big family with five young children and jobs like this one is hard to come by in the area where he lives along with his family. This company deceptively avoids paying the mandatory import duties on the motorcycles it imports from Italy in November 2019. The President of the company, Steven asked MeiMei to prepare and provide him with a statement of the duty avoided on the purchase of these motorcycles for the past three years. The President also asked that MeiMei sign off this statement. The statement that MeiMei prepared and presented to the President showed that $11,800,000 in customs has been avoided by the company in the last three years. Since MeiMei prepared the statement, he was having trouble sleeping at night. i)Explain the ethical issues in the above case. ii)Should MeiMei quit the job and report this situation to the regulatory bodies? Justify your answer.arrow_forward
- Tom gave his daughter, Nicole, permission to access his business account online but not his principal account. Tom has just discovered that Nicole took P25,000 from the principal account (current account) hoping her father would not notice it. As Tom wrote to the manager of his local bank months ago, expressly forbidding the bank to allow his daughter to do this, he wants the bank to refund the P25,000. With respect to BDO Online Account Opening Service (“Service”) Terms and Conditions, what recommendation can you give him?arrow_forwardBarbara was a regular shopper at Egeeay Supermarket, which was part of a large nationwide supermarket chain. She was there at least once a week and sometimes more often if the specials were really good. When Barbara was there this week, she slipped on some grapes in the pet-food section in aisle 3, slipping and falling, and breaking her ankle. The store manager was not sure how the grapes got there or how long they had been there, but store policy was to do checks every 15 minutes of the floor in the fruit section. The store manager indicated that there were a number of spillages every week in the green grocery section of the store. The store owner wishes to know: a) Whether Egeeay Supermarket owes a duty of care to Barbara?arrow_forwardDylan worked for a propane gas distributor as an accounting clerk in a small Midwestern town. Last winter, his brother Mike lost his job at the machine plant. By January, temperatures were sub-zero, and Mike had run out of money. Dylan saw that Mike’s account was overdue, and he knew Mike needed another delivery to heat his home. He decided to credit Mike’s account and debit the balance to the parts inventory because he knew the parts manager, the owner’s son, was incompetent and would never notice the extra entry. Months went by, and Dylan repeated the process until an auditor ran across the charges by chance. When the owner fired Dylan, he said, “If you had only come to me and told me about Mike’s situation, we could have worked something out.” Requirements What can a business like this do to prevent employee fraud of this kind? What effect would Dylan’s actions have on the balance sheet? The income statement? How much discretion does a business have with regard to accommodating…arrow_forward
- Intermediate Financial Management (MindTap Course...FinanceISBN:9781337395083Author:Eugene F. Brigham, Phillip R. DavesPublisher:Cengage LearningBusiness Its Legal Ethical & Global EnvironmentAccountingISBN:9781305224414Author:JENNINGSPublisher:Cengage