CASE STUDY Cost Classification and Cost Behavior The Dorilans Company specializes in producing a set of wood patio furniture consisting of a table and four chairs. The set enjoys great popularity, and the company has ample orders to keep production going at its full capacity of 2,000 sets per year. Annual cost data at full capacity follow: Direct labor ...... Advertising ........ Factory supervision ....... Property taxes, factory building Sales commissions .. Insurance, factory ........ Depreciation, administrative office equipment Lease cost, factory equipment .. Indirect materials, factory .... Depreciation, factory building .. Administrative office supplies (billing)..... Administrative office salaries.. Direct materials used (wood, bolts, etc.).. Utilities, factory .... $118,000 $50,000 $40,000 $3,500 $80,000 $2,500 $4,000 $12,000 $6,000 $10,000 $3,000 $60,000 $94,000 $20,000 Required: 1. Prepare an answer sheet with the column headings shown below. Enter each cost item on your answer sheet, placing the dollar amount under the appropriate headings. As examples, this has been done already for the first two items in the list above. Note that each cost item is classified in two ways: first, as variable or fixed with respect to the number of units produced and sold, and second, as a selling and administrative cost or a product cost. (If the item is a product cost, it should also be classified as either direct or indirect as shown.) Period (Selling or Administrative) Cost Product Cost Direct Indirect $118,000 Cost Behavior Variable Fixed $118,000 $50,000 Cost Item Direct labor ........ Advertising *To units of product. $50,000 2. Total the dollar amounts in each of the columns in (1) above. Compute the average product cost of one patio set. 3. Assume that production drops to only 1,000 sets annually. Would you expect the average product cost per set to increase, decrease, or remain unchanged? Explain. No computations are necessary. 4. Refer to the original data. The president's brother-in-law has considered making himself a patio set and has priced the necessary materials at a building supply store. The brother-in-law has asked the president if he could purchase a patio set from the Dorilane Company "at cost," and the president agreed to let him do so. Would you expect any disagreement between the two men over the price the brother-in- law should pay? Explain. What price does the president probably have in mind? The brother-in-law