ANSWERS TO SAMPLE TEST #3



Similar documents
Cash Receipts, Cash Payments, and Banking Procedures

INVENTORY. Merchandising Firms COST OF GOODS SOLD. Traditional bookkeeping uses separate accounts for different types of transactions

Agenda. Lecture Chapter 9 Quiz Chapter 8 Exercises & Problem Chapter 8. Objective. Cash Receipts. Cash Receipts, Payments, & Banking Procedures

Cash in bank checking account $22,500 U.S. treasury bills 5,000 Cash on hand 1,350 Undeposited customer checks 1,840 Total $30,690 Requirement 2

Unique Global Imports Simulation. Helpful Hints

Chapter. Skyline College 7-1

Accounting. Chapter 6

ADVANCED ACCOUNTING (02) KEY. Regional Multiple Choice 2 points each) Short Answer 6 points each)

Chapter 9: Cash Receipts, Cash Payments, and Banking Procedures

January 12, 19, 26 and February 2, 2008 Holiday Inn Galleria ADB Ave. Ortigas

7 Accounting for Sales and Accounts Receivable

Chapter 7 Fraud, Internal Control, and Cash 高立翰

Veideretti Cabinets, Incorporated

DISCUSSION QUESTIONS. Suggested Responses

DCCCD BUSINESS PROCEDURES MANUAL. Revision Log

CHAPTER 7. Accounting systems CONTENTS

BANK RECONCILIATION 08 MAY 2014

FINAL EXAM The Hashemite University, Department of Accounting, Dr Husam Al-Khadash Principle of Accounting,

County Accounting Manual. Accounts Receivables and Sales Receipts - Deposits

PLAR PLAR PLAR. Change. Learning. Change. Learning. Knowledge recognition. Learning. knowledge. skills. Knowledge. Learning. recognition.

CEBU CPAR CENTER M a n d a u e C I t y

CHAPTER 9 CASH. Chapter 9. Copyright 2012 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.

keeping a running balance

8 posting to general ledger accounts Learning outcomes

Century 21 Accounting, 8e General Journal Chapter Outlines

Learn Accounting Understand Business: Course Review Answers

Reconciling the Bank Statement

Bank Reconciliations

The General Journal and the General Ledger

Classifying assets, liabilities, and owner s equity

1. Analyze the following T-account in the ledger of Moxy Pool Supply Company

Caused By 1. Time. 2. Errors. lags $ XXX. but not by bank (e.g., deposits. Add: Deposits recorded by business. Cash balance per bank statement

Chapter 8. Internal Control. Chapter 8-1

Preparing for Bank Reconciliations

General Journal Debit Credit.I 400./.I

Accounting 201 Comprehensive Practice Exam 2C Page 1

Accounting for Merchandising Companies: Journal Entries

2011 PBL National Leadership Conference Accounting for Professionals Test

HOW TO RECONCILE YOUR CASH ACCOUNTS

Internal Control and Cash. Study Objectives. Chapter Outline

SECTION 2.05 IMPREST CHECKING ACCOUNTS Contact: Extension 4170

Chapter 4: Transactions to General Ledger Chapter Review Solutions


In the event of a tie, the score on the last ten questions will be used as a tie-breaker.

TRUST ACCOUNT. Record Keeping Guide ARKANSAS REAL ESTATE COMMISSION

Accounting for Cash. College Accounting. Heintz & Parry CASH INTERNAL CONTROL OPENING A CHECKING ACCOUNT

Granite Bay Jet Ski, Incorporated

Checking 101. Property of Penn State Federal Credit Union

What are the elements of an accounting system?

JOB READY ASSESSMENT BLUEPRINT ACCOUNTING-BASIC - PILOT. Test Code: 4100 Version: 01

REVOLVING FUND CHECKING ACCOUNTS. Revolving fund checking accounts are authorized with payments not to exceed $75.00 per purchase.

Accounting Notes. Purchasing Merchandise under the Perpetual Inventory system:

lesson six banking services overheads

Baseline Assessment. Date Accounting 1

Checking 101. Checking Out Checking Accounts

Supplemental Instruction Handouts Financial Accounting Chapter 7: Accounting Information Systems: Perpetual

Unit 2 The Basic Accounting Cycle

2 Under a perpetual inventory system merchandise is purchased for cash. Which is the correct journal entry to record this purchase?

Checking Accounts. Open, Manage, and Reconcile

ACCOUNTING 1 (ACN101- M)

Foreign Exchange Translation Service

Debit Cash. Journalizing Transactions. Problem 2-2b. Created 2009 By Michael Worthington Elizabeth City State University

How To Write A Check Online

ACCT 335 Chapter 7 Pre-Assigned Problems Suggested Solutions

GRAAD 12 NATIONAL SENIOR CERTIFICATE GRADE 12

Chapter 9. Accounting for Receivables. McGraw-Hill/Irwin

Monitoring of controls Information System Control procedures

Reference Document Month-End Closing

CHAPTER 22. Liabilities CONTENTS

We now examine the documents and procedures used to perform each step. Step 1: Capture Transaction Data on Source Documents

Do it! Chapter 11. Current Liabilities

Quick Guide Bank Charges & Handling NSF Checks

ACCT 652 Accounting. Review of last week. Should you always take discounts? 5/17/15. ACCT652 Week 4 1

Accounting I & Accounting II

The learners shall be able to

INVENTORY CONTROL SYSTEMS

Overdraft Education Practice & Reference Materials

Objective Evidence. Unit of Measurement. Accounting Period Cycle. Business Entity. Going Concern. Adequate Disclosure. Matching Expenses with Revenue

Accounting for Sales, Accounts Receivable, and Cash Receipts

4. $4,319 Accounts Receivable account in the General Ledger (5 min.) S 8-8

Learn about. How to deposit money. How to make withdrawals and write checks. How to keep track of your money

Fundamentals of Financial Accounting

Grade 10 Accounting Notes SET 2: Basics Cash Retail Business Cash Transactions. Name: JCansfield Page 1 of 27

Self-test Comprehensive Problems II 综 合 自 测 题 II

COMPUTERIZED ACCOUNTING I Curriculum Content Frameworks

Chapter 5. Accounting for merchandising operations. Appendix 5A: Periodic inventory system

CEBU CPAR CENTER, INC. AUDIT OF CASH AND CASH EQUIVALENTS

REVIEW FOR EXAM NO. 3, ACCT-2301 (SAC) (Chapters 7-9)

Purpose of a Checking Account- Money is deposited into an account and checks or drafts can be written to withdraw money from the account.

CHAPTER 8 ACCOUNTING FOR PURCHASES, ACCOUNTS PAYABLE, AND CASH PAYMENTS

Controlling and Reporting Cash

PROFESSOR S NAME ACC 255 FALL 2011 COVER SHEET FOR COMPREHENSIVE PROBLEM 2 (CHAPTERS 2, 5-8)

How to handle Factoring in your Sage BusinessWorks

BUS312A/612A Financial Reporting I. Homework & Receivables Chapter 7

Transcription:

ANSWERS TO SAMPLE TEST #3 PART A: 1 F 16 B 2 T 17 A 3 T 18 D 4 F 19 B 5 F 20 A 6 T 21 C 7 F 22 D 8 T 23 A 9 F 24 B 10 T 25 D 11 A 26 B 12 D 27 D 13 C 28 A 14 B 29 C 15 A 30 A

PART B: PROBLEMS (various points - see below - total of 55 pts): 1. Use a checkmark to indicate the journal in which each of the following transactions should be recorded (10 pts): Transaction SJ PJ CRJ CPJ GJ a. Issued Ck. No. 1054 for $875 for the month's rent. X b. Purchased merchandise, invoice no. 1025, $1,326, agreeing X to pay in 30 days. c. Bought office supplies on account, $88. X d. Sold services amounting to $1,865 for cash. X e. Sold merchandise on account, $1,580. X f. Received $381 from charge customers to apply on account. X g. The owner withdrew $5,000 for personal use. X h. Journalized end-of-the-year closing entries. X i. Purchased merchandise for $1,750 in cash. X k. Received a credit memo for merchandise returned. X 2. Bradley's Appliance Store had the following transactions during the month of May 2005. Record the transactions on page 5 of a sales journal and page 8 of a general journal (use the forms on the next page). Total, prove and rule the sales journal as of May 31, 2005 (15 pts). May 5 Sold a refrigerator to Mary Wilson. Issued Sales Slip 452 for $650 plus sales tax of $32.50. 6 Sold a freezer to Samantha Lee. Issued Sales Slip 453 for $900 plus sales tax of $45. 8 Gave Mary Wilson an allowance for scratches on her refrigerator sold on May 5, Sales Slip 452. Issued Credit Memorandum 118 for $57.75, which includes $2.75 of sales tax. 15 Sold a portable television to Jill Hanna. Issued Sales Slip 454 for $345 plus sales tax of $17.25. 20 Sold a microwave over to Salema Miryam. Issued Sales Slip 455 for $175 plus sales tax of $8.75. 25 Accepted a return of a defective microwave oven from Salema Miryam. The oven was originally sold on May 20, Sales Slip 455. Issued Credit Memorandum 199 for $183.75, which includes sales tax of $8.75

SALES JOURNAL PAGE _5_ SALES SLIP NO. CUSTOMER'S ACCOUNT DEBITED ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE DEBIT SALES TAX PAYABLE SALES 2005 May 5 452 Mary Wilson 682.50 32.50 650.00 6 453 Samantha Lee 945.00 45.00 900.00 15 454 Jill Hanna 362.25 17.25 345.00 20 455 Salema Miryam 183.75 8.75 175.00 31 Totals 2173.50 103.50 2070.00 GENERAL JOURNAL Page 8 DESCRIPTION DEBIT 1 05 1 2 May 8 Sales Returns & Allowances 5 5 00 2 3 Sales Tax Payable 2 75 3 4 AR / M. Wilson 5 7 75 4 5 Issued CM 118 5 6 6 7 25 Sales Returns & Allowances 1 7 5 00 7 8 Sales Tax Payable 8 75 1 8 3 75 8 9 AR / S. Miryam 9 10 Issued CM 119 10 11 11 12 12 13 13 14 14 3. Record the following transactions for the month of April 2005 on page 4 of a cash receipts journal (use the form below). Total, prove and rule the cash receipts journal as of April 30 (15 pts). Apr 3 Collected $350 from Margo Daub, a credit customer on account. 8 Kevin Sharp, the owner, invested additional $5,000 cash in business. 9 Received a cash refund of $30 for damaged supplies. 15 Had cash sales of $5,500 plus sales tax of $385. There was a cash overage of $5. 18 Received $800 from Brian Cobb, a credit customer, in payment of his account.

20 Received a check from Phil Stout to pay his $700 promissory note plus interest of $42. 30 Had cash sales of $3,800 plus sales tax of $266. There was a cash shortage of $5. CASH RECEIPTS JOURNAL Page_4_ 04 Apr DESCRIPTION ACCTS RECEIVABLE SALES TAX PAYABLE SALES OTHER ACCOUNTS POS ACCOUNT NAME T. AMOUNT CASH DEBIT 3 M. Daub 350.00 350.00 8 Investment Sharp, Capital 5000.00 5000.00 9 Cash Refund Supplies 30.00 30.00 1 Cash Short or 5 Cash Sales 385.00 5500.00 Over 5.00 5890.00 1 8 B. Cobb 800.00 800.00 2 Collect note Notes 0 from P. Stout Receivable 700.00 Int Income 42.00 742.00 3 Cash Short or 5 0 Cash Sales 266.00 3800.00 Over 4061.00 3 0 Totals 1150.00 651.00 9300.00 5772.00 16873.00 4. On October 5, 2005, the balance of Creative Solutions, Inc's checkbook and Cash account was $16,622. The balance shown on the bank statement on the same date was $14,922.50 (15 pts). Notes 5. The following checks were issued but have not been yet paid by the bank: Check 128 for $150.00, Check 132 for $70.00. 6. The firm's records indicate that a deposit of $1,800.00 made on September 28 does not appear on the bank statement. 7. A service charge of $7.50 and a debit memorandum of $112.00 covering an NSF check from a credit customer, Julia Anderson, have not yet been entered in the firm's records. Instructions 1. Prepare a bank reconciliation statement for the firm as of September 30, 2005 (use the form on page 4). 2. Record journal entries for any items on the bank reconciliation statement that must be journalized (use the general journal form on page 4). Date the entries October 5, 2005.

Creative Solutions, Inc. Bank Reconciliation Statement September 30, 2005 Balance on Bank Statement 14922.50 Additions: Deposit on 09/28 in transit 1800.00 Deductions for outstanding checks: Check 128 150.00 Check 132 70.00 16722.50 Total outstanding checks 220.00 ADJUSTED BANK BALANCE 16502.50 Balance in Books 16622.00 Deductions: NSF Check 112.00 Bank service Charge 7.50 119.50 ADJUSTED BOOK BALANCE 16502.50 GENERAL JOURNAL DESCRIPTION DEBIT 1 05 1 2 Oct 5 AR / Julia Anderson 1 1 2 00 2 3 Bank Fees Expense 7 50 3 4 Cash 1 1 9 50 4 5 To record. 5 6 6 7 7 8 8 9 9 10 10 11 11 12 12 13 13 14 14