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tino4ka555 [31]
2 years ago
11

Alpha Sounds Corp., an electric guitar retailer, was organized by Michele Kirby, Paul Glenn, and Gretchen Northway. The charter

authorized 1,000,000 shares of common stock with a par of $1. Journalize the entries to record the following transactions affecting stockholders' equity, which were completed during the first year of operations. Refer to the Chart of Accounts for exact wording of account titles.
A) Issued 100,000 shares of stock at par to Paul Glenn for cash.
B) Issued 3,000 shares of stock at par to Michele Kirby for promotional services provided in connection with the organization of the corporation, and issued 45,000 shares of stock at par to Michele Kirby for cash.
C) Purchased land and a building from Gretchen Northway in exchange for stock issued at par. The building is mortgaged for $180,000 for 20 years at 6%, and there is accrued interest of $5,200 on the mortgage note at the time of the purchase. It is agreed that the land is to be priced at $60,000 and the building at $225,000 and that Gretchen Northway's equity will be exchanged for stock at par. The corporation agreed to assume responsibility for paying the mortgage note and the accrued interest.
Business
1 answer:
Galina-37 [17]2 years ago
8 0

Answer:

A) Journal record for issuing 100,000 shares at par value to Paul Glenn

Dr Cash account 100,000

Cr Common Stock account 100,000

B) Journal record for issuing 3,000 shares at par value to Michele Kirby in exchange for promotional services

Dr Promotional Expenses account 3,000

Cr Common Stock account 3,000

Journal record for issuing 45,000 shares at par value to Michele Kirby

Dr Cash account 45,000

Cr Common Stock account 45,000

C) Journal record for land purchase in exchange for stock and mortgage loan + interests accrued

Dr Land account 60,000

Dr Building account 225,000

Cr Mortgage Loan account 180,000

Cr Interest Payable account 5,00

Cr Common Stock account 99,800

You might be interested in
Division A reported income from operations of $975,000 and total service department charges of $675,000. As a result, a.consolid
alexgriva [62]

Answer:

c.income from operations before service department charges was $1,650,000

Explanation:

We can see from the information in the question, that income from operations and service department charges sum a total of $1,650,000

Gross income before service department charges = $975,000 + $675,000

                                                                                    = $1,650,000

8 0
2 years ago
What would the income statement and balance sheet look like for this problem?
steposvetlana [31]

Answer:

INCOME STATEMENT

For the year ended December 31

Service Revenue                   $149,200

Property Taxes          8,800

Salaries Expense  126,600

Insurance Expense   7,300

Supplies Expense    6,600  $149,300

Net loss                                       $100

Dividends                                   3,100

Retained Earnings                 ($3,200)

BALANCE SHEET

As of December 31

Assets:

Cash                              $81,900

Supplies                            3,200

Accounts Payable            <u> 1,900</u>

Total Assets                 $87,000

Liabilities + Equity:

Accts Receivable            51,800

Deferred Revenue            1,100

Insurance Payable           <u>7,300</u>

Total liabilities               60,200

Common Stock             30,000

Retained Earnings         (3,200)

Total liabilities and

stockholders' equity  $87,000

Explanation:

a) Data and Calculations:

Cash account

Date      Accounts Title             Debit      Credit

Jan. 9   Service Revenue     $137,100

Feb. 12 Accounts receivable   51,800

Apr. 25 Deferred Revenue     13,200

July 15  Property taxes                           $8,800

Sep. 10 Accounts Payable                        11,700

Oct. 31 Salaries Expense                      126,600

Nov. 20 Common Stock       30,000

Dec. 30  Dividends                                    3,100

Dec. 31 Balance                                    $81,900

                                          $232,100 $232,100

Service Revenue

Date      Accounts Title             Debit      Credit

Jan. 9   Cash Account                            $137,100

Dec. 31  Deferred Revenue                       12,100

Dec. 31  Income Statement $149,200

                                            $149,200 $149,200

Accounts Receivable

Date      Accounts Title           Debit      Credit

Feb. 12  Cash Account                       $51,800

Deferred Revenue

Date      Accounts Title           Debit      Credit

Apr. 25 Cash Account                         $13,200

Dec. 31  Service Revenue    $12,100

Dec. 31  Balance                     $1,100

                                            $13,200  $1`3,200

Supplies

Date      Accounts Title           Debit      Credit

May 6   Accounts Payable   $9,800

Dec. 31 Supplies Expense                   $6,600

Dec. 31 Balance                                      3,200

                                             $9,800   $9,800

Accounts Payable

Date      Accounts Title           Debit      Credit

May 6   Supplies                                  $9,800

Sep. 10 Cash Account          $11,700

Dec. 31 Balance                                    $1,900

                                             $11,700  $11,700

Property Taxes Expense

Date      Accounts Title           Debit      Credit

July 15  Cash Account         $8,800

Salaries Expense

Date      Accounts Title           Debit      Credit

Oct. 31  Cash                       $126,600

Common Stock

Date      Accounts Title           Debit      Credit

Nov. 20 Cash Account                        $30,000

Dividends

Date      Accounts Title           Debit      Credit

Dec. 30 Cash Account         $3,100

Insurance Expense

Date      Accounts Title           Debit      Credit

Dec. 31  Insurance Payable  $7,300

Supplies Expense

Date      Accounts Title           Debit      Credit

Dec. 31  Supplies Account  $6,600

Insurance Payable

Date      Accounts Title           Debit      Credit

Dec. 31  Insurance Expense                 $7,300

Adjusted TRIAL BALANCE

As of December 31

Accounts Title           Debit      Credit

Cash                        $81,900

Supplies                     3,200

Accounts Payable      1,900

Property Taxes          8,800

Salaries Expense  126,600

Insurance Expense   7,300

Supplies Expense    6,600

Service Revenue                   $149,200

Accts Receivable                       51,800

Deferred Revenue                       1,100

Insurance Payable                      7,300

Common Stock                        30,000

Dividends                  3,100

Total                  $239,400 $239,400

3 0
2 years ago
In 1993, when Fischer began his tenure at Kodak, the film industry was evolving from one type of change which was slow to anothe
zepelin [54]

Answer:

b. Radical

Explanation:

In 1993 the next evolution in the film industry was a Radical Evolution, which is distinguished by the implementation of groundbreaking and innovative technology. Such an innovation was the special effect techniques and advanced technology that was used in order to film the blockbuster hit of "Jurassic Park" since nothing close to what was accomplished in that movie has been done before.

6 0
2 years ago
Greenwood Company manufactures two products—14,000 units of Product Y and 6,000 units of Product Z. The company uses a plantwide
Varvara68 [4.7K]

Answer:

Greenwood Company

1. Company's plantwide overhead rate = $57

2. Allocation of Manufacturing overhead based on plantwide overhead rate:

Product Y = $57 * 9,000 = $513,000

Product Z = $57 * 3,000 =  $171,000

3. Activity rate for the Machining activity cost pool = $20 per MHs.

4. Activity rate for the Machine Setups activity cost pool = $500 per setup.

5. Activity rate for the product Design activity cost pool = $42,000 per product.

6. Activity rate for the General Factory activity cost pool = $25

7. The batch-level activity = Machine setup

8. The product-level activity = Product Design

9. Using the ABC system, Manufacturing overhead cost assigned to Product Y = $447,000

10. Using the ABC system, Manufacturing overhead cost assigned to Product Z = $237,000

11. Using the plantwide overhead rate, the percentage of the total overhead costs allocated to product Y and Product Z is:

Product Y = 75% ($513,000/$684,000 * 100)

Product Z = 25% ($171,000/$684,000 * 100)

12. Using the ABC system, the percentage of the Machining costs assigned to Product Y and Product Z is:

Product Y = 80% ($160,000/$200,000 * 100)

Product Z = 20% ($40,000/$200,000 * 100)

13. Using the ABC system, the percentage of the Machine Setups cost assigned to Product Y and Product Z is:

Product Y = 20% ($20,000/$100,000 * 100)

Product Z = 80% ($80,000/$100,000 * 100)

14. Using the ABC system, what percentage of the product design cost assigned to Product Y and Product Z is:

Product Y = 50% ($42,000/$84,000 * 100)

Product Z = 50% ($42,000/$84,000 * 100)

15. Using the ABC system, what percentage of the General Factory cost assigned to Product Y and Product Z is:

Product Y = 75% ($225,000/$300,000 * 100)

Product Z = 25% ($75,000/$300,000 * 100)

Explanation:

a) Data and Calculations:

            Activity Cost    Activity Measure     Estimated              Expected

                  Pool                                         Overhead Cost        Activity

Machining                   Machine-hours         $200,000            10,000 MHs

Machine setups          Number of setups    $100,000             200 setups

Production design      Number of products  $84,000             2 products

General factory          Direct labor-hours    $300,000            12,000 DLHs

Total                                                              $684,000  

Activity Measure        Product Y         Product Z

Units produced               14,000            6,000

Machining                        8,000            2,000

Number of setups                40                160

Number of products               1                     1

Direct labor-hours          9,000            3,000

Plantwide overhead rate = Total overhead costs/direct labor-hours

= $684,000/12,000 = $57 per DLHs

Overhead Rate =

                                     

Machining                   $20  ($200,000/10,000) per MHs

Machine setup           $500  ($100,000/200) per setup

Production design     $42,000 ($84,000/2) per product

General factory          $25 ($300,000/12,000) per DLHs

Assignment of Manufacturing Overhead:

                                Product Y   Product Z    Total     Product Y   Product Z

Machining                $160,000   $40,000  $200,000    80%           20%

Machine setup            20,000      80,000    100,000     20%           80%

Production design      42,000      42,000      84,000     50%           50%

General factory        225,000      75,000    300,000     75%           25%

Total overhead      $447,000  $237,000  $684,000

7 0
2 years ago
The ________ database would most likely be found in the science and telecommunication industries.
kolezko [41]
Both of those industries are most likely to use object oriented database type.
object oriented database Represent data in the form of objects (like what we use in programming language) rather than representing it in tables.
By offering a form of query language, we could set so the objects could easily be found through declarative programming<span> approach</span>
8 0
2 years ago
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