On April 15, 2019, fire damaged the office and warehouse of Stanislaw ASA. The only accounting record
Question:
The following data and information have been gathered.
1. The fiscal year of the company ends on December 31.
2. An examination of the April bank statement and canceled checks revealed that checks written during the period April 1-15 totaled ¬13,000: ¬5,700 paid to accounts payable as of March 31, ¬3,400 for April merchandise shipments, and ¬3,900 paid for other expenses. Deposits during the same period amounted to ¬12,950, which consisted of receipts on account from customers with the exception of a ¬950 refund from a vendor for merchandise returned in April.
3. Correspondence with suppliers revealed unrecorded obligations at April 15 of ¬15,600 for April merchandise shipments, including ¬2,300 for shipments in transit (f.o.b. shipping point) on that date.
4. Customers acknowledged indebtedness of ¬46,000 at April 15, 2019. It was also estimated that customers owed another ¬8,000 that will never be acknowledged or recovered. Of the acknowledged indebtedness, ¬600 will probably be uncollectible.
5. The companies insuring the inventory agreed that Stanislaw's fire-loss claim should be based on the assumption that the overall gross profit ratio for the past 2 years was in effect during the current year. The company's audited financial statements disclosed this information:
6. Inventory with a cost of ¬7,000 was salvaged and sold for ¬3,500. The balance of the inventory was a total loss.
Instructions
Prepare a schedule computing the amount of inventory fire loss. The supporting schedule of the computation of the gross profit should be in good form.
Financial statements are the standardized formats to present the financial information related to a business or an organization for its users. Financial statements contain the historical information as well as current period’s financial...
Step by Step Answer:
Intermediate Accounting IFRS
ISBN: 978-1119372936
3rd edition
Authors: Donald E. Kieso, Jerry J. Weygandt, Terry D. Warfield