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  1. Belanna Industries Inc. acquired land, buildings, and equipment from a bankrupt company, Torres Co., for a lump-sum price of \(700,000. At the time of purchase, Torres’s assets had the following book and appraisal values.

Book Values

Appraisal Values

Land

\)200,000

\(150,000

Buildings

250,000

350,000

Equipment

300,000

300,000

To be conservative, the company decided to take the lower of the two values for each asset acquired. The following entry was made.

Land 150,000

Buildings 250,000

Equipment 300,000

Cash 700,000

  1. Harry Enterprises purchased store equipment by making a \)2,000 cash down payment and signing a 1-year, \(23,000, 10% note payable. The purchase was recorded as follows.

Equipment 27,300

Cash 2,000

Notes Payable 23,000

Interest Payable 2,300

  1. Kim Company purchased office equipment for \)20,000, terms 2/10, n/30. Because the company intended to take the discount, it made no entry until it paid for the acquisition. The entry was:

Equipment 20,000

Cash 19,600

Purchase Discounts 400

  1. Kaisson Inc. recently received at zero cost land from the Village of Cardassia as an inducement to locate its business in the Village. The appraised value of the land is \(27,000. The company made no entry to record the land because it had no cost basis.
  2. Zimmerman Company built a warehouse for \)600,000. It could have purchased the building for $740,000. The controller made the following entry.

Buildings740,000

Cash 600,000

Profit on Construction 140,000

Instructions

Prepare the entry that should have been made at the date of each acquisition.

Short Answer

Expert verified

Answer

  1. The total value of land, building, and equipment are $700,000.
  2. Notes payable are $23,000
  3. Accounts payable are $19,600
  4. Contribution revenue is $27,000
  5. Cash is $600,000

Step by step solution

01

Meaning of Acquisition CostStep 1: Meaning of Acquisition Cost

In accounting terms, acquisition cost alludes to the cost of acquiring a particular thing. There are three common business contexts when this term is used: mergers and acquisitions, fixed resources, and client acquisition.

02

(1) Preparing journal entry

Land=TotalcostofAsset×AppraisalValuesTotalAppraisalValues=700,000×150,000800,000=131,250Date

Particulars

Debit ($)

Credit ($)

Land

131,250

Buildings

306,250

Equipment

262,500

Cash

700,000

Working notes:

Calculation of land

Land=TotalcostofAsset×AppraisalValuesTotalApprisalValues=700,000×150,000800,000=131,250

Land=TotalcostofAsset×AppraisalValuesTotalAppraisalValues=700,000×150,000800,000=131,250

Land=TotalcostofAsset×AppraisalValuesTotalAppraisalValues=700,000×150,000800,000=131,250

Calculation of building





Building=Totalcostofasset×AppraisalvaluesTotalAppraisalvalues=700,000×350,000800,000=306,250

Building=TotalcostofAsset×AppraisalValuesTotalAppraisalValues=700,000×350,000800,000=306,250

Calculation of equipment

width="428">Equipment=Totalcostofasset×AppraisalValuesTotalAppraisalValues=700,000×300,000800,000=262,500

Land=TotalcostofAsset×AppraisalValuesTotalApprisalValues=700,000×150,000800,000=131,250

03

(2) Preparing journal entry

Particulars

Debit ($)

Credit ($)

Equipment

25,000

Cash

2,000

Notes Payable

23,000

04

(3) Preparing journal entry

Date

Particulars

Debit ($)

Credit ($)

Equipment

19,600

Accounts Payable

19,600

Working notes:

Calculation of accounts payable

Accountpayable=Equipmentcost-Equipmentcost×Rateofperiod=20,000-20,000-2%=20,000-400=19,600

AccountPayable=Equipmentcost-Equipmentcost×Rateofperiod=20,000-20,000-2%=20,000-400=19,600

05

(4) Preparing journal entry

Date

Particulars

Debit ($)

Credit ($)

Land

27,000

Contribution Revenue

27,000

06

(5) Preparing journal entry

Date

Particulars

Debit ($)

Credit ($)

Buildings

600,000

Cash

600,000

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Most popular questions from this chapter

To what extent do you consider the following items to be proper costs of the fixed asset? Give reasons for your opinions.

  1. Overhead of a business that builds its own equipment.
  2. Cash discounts on purchases of equipment.
  3. Interest paid during the construction of a building.
  4. Cost of a safety device installed on a machine.
  5. Freight on equipment returned before installation, for replacement by other equipment of greater capacity.
  6. Cost of moving machinery to a new location.
  7. Cost of plywood partitions erected as part of the remodeling of the office.
  8. Replastering of a section of the building.
  9. Cost of a new motor for one of the trucks.

Indicate which of the following costs should be expensed when incurred.

(a) \(13,000 paid to rearrange and reinstall machinery.

(b) \)200,000 paid for addition to building.

(c) \(200 paid for tune-up and oil change on delivery truck.

(d) \)7,000 paid to replace a wooden floor with a concrete floor.

(e) $2,000 paid for a major overhaul on a truck, which extends the useful life

Ottawa Corporation owns machinery that cost \(20,000 when purchased on July 1, 2014. Depreciation has been recorded at a rate of \)2,400 per year, resulting in a balance in accumulated depreciation of \(8,400 at December 31, 2017. The machinery is sold on September 1, 2018, for \)10,500. Prepare journal entries to (a) update depreciation for 2018 and (b) record the sale.

What accounting treatment is normally given to the following items in accounting for plant assets? (a) Additions. (b) Major repairs. (c) Improvements and replacements.

Question: Provide examples of assets that do not qualify for interest capitalization

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