Introduction:
Honouring a note: When the maker pays the full amount on the date of maturity then a note is honored.
Notes Receivable: It refers to the account on the balance sheet which usually comes under the current assets section if the life of note receivable is less than a year. Note receivable refers to the document which promises to receive the amount in the future. This amount usually includes interest and principal amount.
The date on which repayment of notes is must with the interest of that specific holding period is called a maturity date. Generally, the notes period is in day’s means it is less than a year.
For the borrower, the cost of borrowing money and the profit from lending money is regarded as the interest on notes receivable.
To prepare:
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionChapter 7 Solutions
Financial Accounting: Information for Decisions
- On December 1 of the current year, Jordan Inc. assigns 125,000 of its accounts receivable to McLaughlin Company for cash. McLaughlin Company charges a 750 service fee, advances 85% of Jordans accounts receivable, and charges an annual interest rate of 9% on any outstanding loan balance. Prepare the related journal entries for Jordan.arrow_forwardOn December 1 of the current year, Jordan Inc. assigns 125,000 of its accounts receivable to McLaughlin Company for cash. McLaughlin Company charges a 750 service fee, advances 85% of Jordans accounts receivable, and charges an annual interest rate of 9% on any outstanding loan balance. Prepare the related journal entries for Jordan. Refer to RE6-10. On December 31, Jordan Inc. received 50,000 on assigned accounts. Prepare Jordans journal entries to record the cash receipt and the payment to McLaughlin.arrow_forwardArvan Patel is a customer of Banks Hardware Store. For Mr. Patels latest purchase on January 1, 2018, Banks Hardware issues a note with a principal amount of $480,000, 13% annual interest rate, and a 24-month maturity date on December 31, 2019. Record the journal entries for Banks Hardware Store for the following transactions. A. Note issuance B. Subsequent interest entry on December 31, 2018 C. Honored note entry at maturity on December 31, 2019.arrow_forward
- Jain Enterprises honors a short-term note payable. Principal on the note is $425,000, with an annual interest rate of 3.5%, due in 6 months. What journal entry is created when Jain honors the note?arrow_forwardA company collects an honored note with a maturity date of 24 months from establishment, a 10% interest rate, and an initial loan amount of $30,000. Which accounts are used to record collection of the honored note at maturity date? A. Interest Revenue, Interest Expense, Cash B. Interest Receivable, Cash, Notes Receivable C. Interest Revenue, Interest Receivable, Cash, Notes Receivable D. Notes Receivable, Interest Revenue, Cash, Interest Expensearrow_forwardFollowing are transactions for Vitalo Company. November 1 Accepted a $7,000, 180-day, 7% note from Kelly White in granting a time extension on her past-due account receivable. December 31 Adjusted the year-end accounts for the accrued interest earned on the White note. April 30 White honored her note when presented for payment. Complete the table to calculate the interest amounts at December 31st and April 30th and use those calculated values to prepare your journal entries. (Do not round intermediate calculations. Use 365 days a year.) Complete this question by entering your answers in the tabs below. Interest Amounts General Journal Complete the table to calculate the interest amounts at December 31st and April 30th.arrow_forward
- Following are transactions for Veilstone Jewelers. November 1 Accepted a $15,000, 180-day, 5% note from Vitalo in granting a time extension on her past-due account receivable. December 31 Adjusted the year-end accounts for the accrued interest earned on the White note. April 30 Vitalo honored her note when presented for payment. Calculate the interest amounts at December 31st and April 30th and use those calculated values to prepare your journal entries. Note: Do not round intermediate calculations. Use 360 days a year. Complete this question by entering your answers in the tabs below. General Journal Use those calculated values to prepare your journal entries. View transaction list Journal entry worksheet 1 2 3 4 Accepted a $15,000, 180-day, 5% note from Vitalo in granting a time extension on her past-due account receivable.arrow_forwardFollowing are transactions for Vitalo Company. November 1 Accepted a $5,000, 180-day, 7% note from Kelly White in granting a time extension on her past-due account. receivable. December 31 Adjusted the year-end accounts for the accrued interest earned on the White note. April 30 White honored her note when presented for payment. Complete the table to calculate the interest amounts at December 31st and April 30th and use those calculated values to prepare your journal entries. (Do not round intermediate calculations. Use 360 days a year.) Complete this question by entering your answers in the tabs below. Interest Amounts General Journal Complete the table to calculate the interest amounts at December 31st and April 30th. November 1 Through December 31 January 1 Through April 30 Principal Rate (%) Time Total interest Total Through Maturityarrow_forwardPrepare journal entries to record transactions for Vitalo Company. Nov. 1 Accepted a $6,000, 180-day, 8% note from Kelly White in granting a time extension on her past-due account receivable. Dec. 31 Adjusted the year-end accounts for the accrued interest earned on the White note. Apr. 30 White honored her note when presented for payment.arrow_forward
- Following are selected transactions for Vitalo Company. Nov. 1 Accepted a $18,000, 180-day, 5% note dated November 1 from Kelly White in granting a time extension on her past-due account receivable. Dec. 31 Adjusted the year-end accounts for the accrued interest earned on the White note. Apr. 30 White honored her note when presented for payment; February has 28 days for the current year. Complete the table to calculate the interest amounts at December 31st and April 30th and use those calculated values to prepare your journal entries (assume that no reversing entries are recorded). (Do not round intermediate calculations. Use 360 days a year.)arrow_forwardPrepare journal entries to record these transactions (round the answer to two decimal places): Oct. 31 Accepted a $20,000, six-month, 5% note dated today from Client X in granting a time extension on her past- due account receivable. Dec. 31 Adjusted the books for the interest due on Client X’s note. Apr. 30 Client X honored the note and paid it in full.arrow_forwardFollowing are transactions for Vitalo Company. 1 Accepted a $3,000, 180-day, 5% note from Kelly White in granting a time extension on her past-due account receivable. Nov. Dec. 31 Adjusted the year-end accounts for the accrued interest earned on the White note. Apr. 30 White honored her note when presented for payment. Complete the table to calculate the interest amounts at December 31s and April 30" and use those calculated values to prepare your journal entries. (Do not round intermediate calculations. Use 360 days a year.) Complete this question by entering your answers in the tabs below. Interest General Journal Amounts Complete the table to calculate the interest amounts at December 31st and April 30th. November 1 January 1 Total Through Through Through Maturity December 31 April 30 Principal Rate (%) Time Total interestarrow_forward
- College Accounting, Chapters 1-27AccountingISBN:9781337794756Author:HEINTZ, James A.Publisher:Cengage Learning,College Accounting (Book Only): A Career ApproachAccountingISBN:9781337280570Author:Scott, Cathy J.Publisher:South-Western College PubPrinciples of Accounting Volume 1AccountingISBN:9781947172685Author:OpenStaxPublisher:OpenStax College
- Intermediate Accounting: Reporting And AnalysisAccountingISBN:9781337788281Author:James M. Wahlen, Jefferson P. Jones, Donald PagachPublisher:Cengage Learning