Shine King Cleaning has decided that, in addition to providing cleaning services, it will sell cleaning products.

Question:

Shine King Cleaning has decided that, in addition to providing cleaning services, it will sell cleaning products. Shine King uses the perpetual inventory system. During December 2015, Shine King completed the following transactions:

Dec. 2 Purchased 600 units of inventory for $ 3,600 on account from Sparkle, Co. on terms, 3/10, n/20.

5 Purchased 400 units of inventory from Borax on account with terms 4/5, n/30. The total invoice was for $ 3,200, which included a $ 200 freight charge.

7 Returned 100 units of inventory to Sparkle from the December 2 purchase (cost $ 600).

9 Paid Borax.

11 Sold 350 units of goods to Happy Maids for $ 4,900 on account with terms 5/10, n/30. Shine King’s cost of the goods was $ 2,100.

12 Paid Sparkle.

15 Received 30 units with a retail price of $ 420 of goods back from customer Happy Maids. The goods cost Shine King $ 180.

21 Received payment from Happy Maids, settling the amount due in full.

28 Sold 200 units of goods to Bridget, Inc. for cash of $ 3,000 (cost $ 1,144).

29 Paid cash for Utilities of $ 350.

30 Paid cash for Sales Commission Expense of $ 225.

31 Recorded the following adjusting entries:

a. Physical count of inventory on December 31 showed 330 units of goods on hand, $ 2,541

b. Depreciation, $ 170

c. Accrued salaries expense of $ 700 d. Prepared all other adjustments necessary for December Assume the cleaning supplies left at December 31 are $ 50.


Requirements

1. Open the following T-accounts in the ledger: Cash, $ 73,100; Accounts Receivable, $ 2,000; Merchandise Inventory, $ 0; Cleaning Supplies, $ 50; Prepaid Rent, $ 1,500; Prepaid Insurance, $ 2,200; Equipment, $ 2,200; Truck, $ 8,000; Accumulated Depreciation, $ 170; Accounts Payable, $ 945; Unearned Revenue, $ 3,450; Salaries Payable, $ 0; Interest Payable, $ 100; Notes Payable (Long-term), $ 40,000; Common Stock, $ 43,000; Retained Earnings, $ 1,385; Dividends, $ 0; Income Summary, $ 0; Service Revenue, $ 0; Sales Revenue, $ 0; Sales Returns and Allowances, $ 0; Sales Discounts, $ 0; Cost of Goods Sold, $ 0; Sales Commission Expense, $ 0; Utilities Expense, $ 0; Depreciation Expense, $ 0; Salaries Expense, $ 0; Insurance Expense, $ 0; Rent Expense, $ 0; Interest Expense, $ 0.

2. Journalize and post the December transactions. Compute each account balance, and denote the balance as Bal. Identify each accounts payable and accounts receivable with the vendor or customer name.

3. Journalize and post the adjusting entries. Denote each adjusting amount as Adj. Compute each account balance and denote the balance as Bal. After posting all adjusting entries, prove the equality of debits and credits in the ledger.

4. Prepare the December multi- step income statement, statement of retained earnings and classified balance sheet for the company. List Service Revenue under gross profit and ignore classifying the expenses as selling and administrative.

5. Journalize the December closing entries for the company.

6. Compute the gross profit percentage for the company.

Accounts Payable
Accounts payable (AP) are bills to be paid as part of the normal course of business.This is a standard accounting term, one of the most common liabilities, which normally appears in the balance sheet listing of liabilities. Businesses receive...
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...
Balance Sheet
Balance sheet is a statement of the financial position of a business that list all the assets, liabilities, and owner’s equity and shareholder’s equity at a particular point of time. A balance sheet is also called as a “statement of financial...
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Horngrens Financial and Managerial Accounting

ISBN: 978-0133255584

4th Edition

Authors: Tracie L. Nobles, Brenda L. Mattison, Ella Mae Matsumura

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