Concept Introduction:
General ledger: A general ledger contains the summarized information taken from its subsidiary ledgers.
Subsidiary Ledger: A Subsidiary Ledger is prepared for the one account of the general ledger. There may be several subsidiary ledgers or one general ledger.
Requirement-1:
To prepare:
Accounts Receivable Subsidiary ledgers
Concept Introduction:
General ledger: A general ledger contains the summarized information taken from its subsidiary ledgers.
Subsidiary Ledger: A Subsidiary Ledger is prepared for one account of the general ledger. There may be several subsidiary ledgers or one general ledger.
Requirement-2:
To prepare:
Accounts Receivable and Sales General Ledger T accounts
Concept Introduction:
General ledger: A general ledger contains the summarized information taken from its subsidiary ledgers.
Subsidiary Ledger: A Subsidiary Ledger is prepared for one account of the general ledger. There may be several subsidiary ledgers or one general ledger.
Requirement-3:
To prepare:
A Schedule of Accounts Receivable and reconciliation of its balance with the Accounts receivable controlling account balance
Want to see the full answer?
Check out a sample textbook solutionChapter 7 Solutions
FUND.ACCT.PRIN.
- SCHEDULE OF ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE Based on the information provided in Problem 10-11A, prepare a schedule of accounts receivable for Sourk Distributors as of March 31, 20--. Verify that the accounts receivable account balance in the general ledger agrees with the schedule of accounts receivable total.arrow_forwardSCHEDULE OF ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE Based on the information provided in Problem 10-12A, prepare a schedule of accounts receivable for Sourk Distributors as of March 31, 20--. Verify that the accounts receivable account balance in the general ledger agrees with the schedule of accounts receivable total.arrow_forwardKelley Company has completed the following October sales and purchases journals: a. Total and post the journals to T accounts for the general ledger and the accounts receivable and accounts payable ledgers. b. Complete a schedule of accounts receivable for October 31, 20--. c. Complete a schedule of accounts payable for October 31, 20--. d. Compare the balances of the schedules with their respective general ledger accounts. If they are not the same, find and correct the error(s).arrow_forward
- Maddie Inc. has the following transactions for its first month of business. A. What are the individual account balances, and the total balance, in the accounts receivable subsidiary ledger? B. What is the balance in the accounts receivable general ledger (control) account?arrow_forwardTransactions related to revenue and cash receipts completed by Crowne Business Services Co. during the period April 230 are as follows: Post revenue and collections to the accounts receivable subsidiary ledger. Instructions 1. Insert the following balances in the general ledger as of April 1: 2. Insert the following balances in the accounts receivable subsidiary ledger as of April 1: 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 April. 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 customers 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 balances agrees with the accounts receivable controlling account in the general ledger. 7. Why would an automated system omit postings to a controlling account as performed in step 5 for Accounts Receivable?arrow_forwardTransactions related to revenue and cash receipts completed by Sycamore Inc. during the month of March 20Y8 are as follows: Prepare a single-column revenue journal and a cash receipts journal to record these transactions. Use the following column headings for the cash receipts journal: Fees Earned Cr., Accounts Receivable Cr., and Cash Dr. Place a check mark () in the Post. Ref. column to indicate when the accounts receivable subsidiary ledger should be posted.arrow_forward
- Catherines Cookies has a beginning balance in the Accounts Receivable control total account of $8,200. $15,700 was credited to Accounts Receivable during the month. In the sales journal, the Accounts Receivable debit column shows a total of $12,000. What is the ending balance of the Accounts Receivable account in the general ledger?arrow_forwardOriole Products uses both special journals and a general journal. Oriole also posts customers' accounts in the accounts receivable subsidiary ledger. The postings for the most recent month are included in the subsidiary T-accounts below. Estes Bal. 305 245 Truong 0 Bal. 225 Gehrke Bal. 275 170 Weiser Bal. 155 310 160 230 225 275 155 Determine the correct amount of the end-of-month posting from the sales journal to the Accounts Receivable control account.arrow_forwardWarton Company posts individual sales to the accounts receivable subsidiary ledger immediately. At the end of each month, Warton posts the end-of-month totals to the general ledger. July 2 Mary Mack . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $ 8,600 8 Eric Horner . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11,100 10 Troy Wilson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 13,400 14 Hong Jiang . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20,500 20 Troy Wilson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11,200 29 Mary Mack . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7,300 Total credit sales . . . . . . . . . . . . $72,100 1. Open an accounts receivable subsidiary ledger with a T-account for each customer. Post the amounts to the subsidiary ledger. 2. Open an Accounts Receivable controlling T-account and a Sales T-account to reflect general ledger accounts. Post the end-of-month total to these accounts. 3. Prepare a schedule of accounts receivable and prove (confirm) that its total equals the Accounts Receivable controlling account balance.arrow_forward
- Use the journals and ledgers that follow. Total the journals. Post the transactions to the subsidiary ledger and (using T-accounts) to the general ledger accounts. Then prepare a schedule of accounts receivable. Round your answers to two decimal places. If an amount box does not require an entry, leave it blank. SALES JOURNAL Page: 79 Date Account InvoiceNo. Ref. DR Accts.ReceivableCR Sales DR COGSCR MerchandiseInventory 2019 Feb. 4 Evert Company 17433 E123 2,000.00 Feb. 8 King Inc. 17434 K331 775.30 Feb. 14 Martina Inc. 17435 M132 2,301.99 Feb. 16 Shriver Company 17436 S101 700.00 Total fill in the blank 1 CASH RECEIPTS JOURNAL Page: 102 Date Account InvoiceNo. Ref. CashDR SalesDiscountsDR AccountsReceivable,Sales, or OtherAccounts CR 2019 Feb. 1 Cash Sales 475.00 475.00 Feb. 5 Payment from Evert Co. 17433 1,960.00 40.00 2,000.00 Feb. 15 Bank loan 230 1,500.00 1,500.00 Feb. 21 Payment from…arrow_forward16.3 You are to enter up the sales, purchases, returns inwards and returns outwards day books from the following details, then to post the items to the relevant accounts in the sales and chase ledgers. The total of the day books are then to be transferred to the accounts in the General Ledger. 20X9 May 1 Credit sales: T Thompson f56; L Rodriguez £148; K Barton f145. 3 Credit purchases: P Potter £144; H Harris £25; B Spencer £76. 7 Credit sales: K Kelly £89; N Mendes £78; N Lee £257. 9 Credit purchases: B Perkins £24; H Harris £58; H Miles £123. 11 Goods returned by us to: P Potter £12; B 5pencer £22. 14 Goods returned to us by: T Thompson £5; K Barton £11; K Kelly £14. 17 Credit purchases: H Harris [54; B Perkins £65; L Nixon £75. Goods returned by us to B Spencer £14. 24 Credit sales: K Mohammed £57; K Kelly f65; O Green £112. Goods returned to us by N Mendes £24. 71 20 11 28 31 Credit sales: N Lee £55.arrow_forwardAccounts Receivable Subsidiary Ledger The debits and credits from two transactions are presented in the following customer account: NAME Horizon Entertainment ADDRESS 125 Wycoff Ave. Debit Credit Date Item Post. Ref. Balance Feb. 1 Balance 280 Feb. 22 Invoice No. 422 CR106 120 160 Feb. 27 Invoice No. 445 R92 170 330 Select the choice that describes each transaction and the source of each posting. Journal page Date Action Invoice No. Posted From Feb. 22 Feb. 27arrow_forward
- College Accounting (Book Only): A Career ApproachAccountingISBN:9781337280570Author:Scott, Cathy J.Publisher:South-Western College PubCollege Accounting, Chapters 1-27AccountingISBN:9781337794756Author:HEINTZ, James A.Publisher:Cengage Learning,College Accounting, Chapters 1-27 (New in Account...AccountingISBN:9781305666160Author:James A. Heintz, Robert W. ParryPublisher:Cengage Learning
- Principles of Accounting Volume 1AccountingISBN:9781947172685Author:OpenStaxPublisher:OpenStax CollegeFinancial AccountingAccountingISBN:9781337272124Author:Carl Warren, James M. Reeve, Jonathan DuchacPublisher:Cengage LearningCentury 21 Accounting Multicolumn JournalAccountingISBN:9781337679503Author:GilbertsonPublisher:Cengage