Eastern Supply uses the allowance method in accounting for uncollectible accounts with the estimate based on the
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Accounts Receivable ..................................................... $687,000
Allowance for Doubtful Accounts (credit balance) .................. 72,600
The following transactions took place during September 2014:
Sept. 2 Elbow Inc., which owes $48,000, is unable to pay on time and has given a 25-day, 8 percent note in settlement of the account.
6 Received from Irma Good the amount owed on an August 7 dishonoured note, plus extra interest for 30 days at 4% computed on the maturity value of the note ($12,600). This dishonoured note had been converted to an Account Receivable on August 7.
9 Received notice that a customer (Tony Goad) has filed for bankruptcy. Goad owes $19,200. The courts will confirm the amount recoverable at a later date.
11 Determined the account receivable from Kay Walsh ($9,120) was uncollectible and wrote it off.
18 Received a cheque from the courts in the amount of $15,000 as final settlement of Goad's account.
27 Elbow Inc. paid the note received on September 2.
27 Determined the account receivable for Dave Campbell ($5,040) was uncollectible and wrote it off.
30 Sales for the month totalled $720,000 (of which 85 percent were on account) and collections on account totalled $601,200.
30 Eastern Supply did an aging of accounts receivable that indicated that $75,000 is expected to be uncollectible. The company recorded the appropriate adjustment.
Required
1. Record the above transactions in the general journal.
2. What would be the adjusting entry required on September 30 if the company used the percent-of-sales method with an estimate of uncollectibles equal to 8 percent of credit sales?
3. Which of the two methods of estimating uncollectible accounts would normally be more accurate? Why?
Accounts Receivable
Accounts receivables are debts owed to your company, usually from sales on credit. Accounts receivable is business asset, the sum of the money owed to you by customers who haven’t paid.The standard procedure in business-to-business sales is that... Maturity
Maturity is the date on which the life of a transaction or financial instrument ends, after which it must either be renewed, or it will cease to exist. The term is commonly used for deposits, foreign exchange spot, and forward transactions, interest...
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Related Book For
Accounting Volume 1
ISBN: 978-0132690096
9th Canadian edition
Authors: Charles T. Horngren, Walter T. Harrison, Jo Ann L. Johnston, Carol A. Meissner, Peter R. Norwood
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