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BCSV

ACCOUNTING 1
Cash and Cash equivalents

I. THEORIES.
A. Multiple Choices. Choose the letter of the best answer.

1. Which of the following shall not be considered cash for financial reporting purposes?
A. Petty cash fund and change funds
B. Money orders, certified checks and personal checks
C. Coins, currencies and available funds
D. IOUs

2. To be reported as cash and cash equivalents, the cash item must be


A. Unrestricted in use for current operations
B. Available for the purchase of property, plant and equipment
C. Set aside for the liquidation of long-term debt
D. Deposited in bank

3. A cash equivalent is a short-term, highly liquid investment that is readily convertible into
known amount of cash and
A. Is acceptable as a means to pay current liabilities
B. Has a current market value that is greater than its original cost.
C. Bears an interest rate that is at least equal to the prime rate of interest at the date of
liquidation.
D. Is so near its maturity that it presents insignificant risk of change in interest rate.

4. Which of the following statements is incorrect concerning measurement of cash and cash
equivalents?
A. Cash is measured at face value
B. Cash in foreign currency is measured at current exchange rate
C. If a bank or financial institution holding the funds of the entity is in bankruptcy or
financial difficulty, cash shall be written down to estimated realizable value.
D. Cash equivalents shall be measured at maturity value.

5. If material, deposits in foreign bank which are subject to foreign exchange restriction shall
be classified
A. Separately as current asset, with appropriate disclosure.
B. Separately as noncurrent asset with appropriate disclosure.
C. Be written off as an extraordinary loss
D. As part of cash and cash equivalents.

6. A compensating balance
A. Must be included in cash and cash equivalent.
B. Which is legally restricted and related to a long term loan is classified as current asset.
C. Which is legally restricted and related to a short-term loan is classified separately as
current asset
D. Which is not legally restricted as to withdrawal is classified separately as current asset.

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7. Under which classification is cash restricted for plant expansion reported?


A. Current assets
B. Noncurrent assets
C. Current liabilities
D. Equity

8. The internal control feature that is specific to petty cash is


A. Separation of duties
B. Assignment of responsibility
C. Proper authorization
D. Imprest system

9. A cash over and short account


A. Is not generally accepted
B. Is debited when the petty cash fund proves out over
C. Is debited when the petty cash fund proves out short
D. Is a contra account to cash

10. In which account are customers’ postdated checks received classified?


A. Accounts receivable
B. Prepaid expenses
C. Cash
D. Accounts payable

11. Which is not considered as a cash equivalent?


A. A 3-year treasury note maturing on May 30 of the current year purchased by the entity
on April 15 of the current year
B. A 3-year treasury note maturing on May 30 of the current year purchased by the entity
on Jan. 15 of the current year.
C. A 90-day treasury bill
D. A 60-day money market placement

12. At the end of the current year, an entity had various checks and papers in its safe. Which
item should not be included in its cash account in the current year-end statement of
financial position?
A. US $ 15,500 cash
B. Past due promissory note issued in favor of the entity by its president
C. Another entity’s P 160,000 check payable to the entity dated Dec. 15 of the current year
D. The entity’s undelivered check payable to a supplier dated Dec. 31 of the current year.

13. A bank reconciliation is


A. A formal financial statement that lists all of the bank account balances of an entity.
B. A merger of two banks that previously were competitors.
C. A statement sent by the bank to depositor on a monthly basis.
D. A schedule that accounts for the differences between an entity’s cash balance as shown
in its general ledger

14. Which of the following must be deducted from the bank statement balance in preparing a
bank reconciliation which ends with adjusted cash balance?
A. Deposits in transit

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B. Outstanding checks
C. Reduction of loan charged to the account of the depositor
D. Certified check

15. When preparing a bank reconciliation, bank credits are


A. Added to the bank statement balance
B. Deducted from the bank statement balance
C. Added to the balance per book
D. Deducted from the balance per book

16. Which of the following statements is true regarding bank overdraft?


a. Is reported as a current liability even though there is another account in the same
bank that reports a positive balance and that the right of offset exists
b. Is netted against another account in the same bank with positive balance (the right
of offset exists) and the net positive balance is reported as cash
c. Is netted against another cash in bank account in another bank and the net positive
balance is reported as part of cash
d. All of the foregoing statements are true

17. Which of the following is cash for financial reporting purposes?


a. Customer’s post-dated checks received on or before reporting date
b. Company’s post-dated checks issued on or before reporting date and recorded as
disbursements at year-end
c. Company’s undelivered checks at year-end but not recorded as disbursements at
year-end
d. Customers’ no sufficient fund checks

18. Unadjusted book balance of cash is less than the correct cash balance of cash due to the
following except
a. Proceeds of note collected by the bank
b. A customer’s check for P540 was recorded by the depositor in the cash receipts
book as P450
c. A check issued to a supplier on account for P760 was recorded in the cash
disbursements book as P670
d. Interest earned

19. Unadjusted bank balance of cash is more than the correct cash balance of cash due to the
following except?
a. Deposit in transit
b. Outstanding checks
c. Erroneous bank credit
d. A customer’s deposit for P450 was recorded by the bank as P540

20. Seldom does the book balance of cash is in agreement with the bank balance of cash due to
any of the following except

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a. Deposit in transit
b. Outstanding checks
c. Bank charges and credits recognized by the bank during the month
d. Bank secrecy requirements

21. The person responsible, at all times, for the amount of the petty cash fund is the
A. Chairman of the Board of Directors
B. President of the company
C. Petty cash custodian
D. General cashier

22. The following are appropriate procedures for controlling the petty cash fund, except
A. To monitor variations in different types of expenditures, the petty cash custodian files
petty cash vouchers by category of expenditure after replenishing the fund
B. To replenish the fund, the general cashier issues a company check to the petty cash
custodian, rather than cash.
C. To determine that the fund is being accounted for satisfactorily, surprise counts of the
fund are made from time to time by the internal auditor or other responsible official.
D. Each individual to whom petty cash is paid is required to present signed receipts to the
petty cash custodian

23. The objective of establishing a petty cash fund is to


A. Cash checks for employees
B. Account for all cash receipts and disbursements
C. Account for cash sales
D. Facilitate payment of small, miscellaneous items.

24. What is the effect of not replenishing the petty cash at year-end and not making the
appropriate adjusting entry?
A. A detailed audit is essential
B. The petty cash custodian should turn over the petty cash to the general cashier
C. Cash will be overstated and expenses understated
D. Expenses will be overstated and cash will be understated

25. Bank overdraft


A. Is a debit balance in a cash in bank account
B. Is offset against demand deposit account in another bank
C. Which cannot be offset is classified as a current liability
D. Which cannot be offset is classified as non-current liability

II. PROBLEM SOLVING.


A. Your audit of the December 31, 2013, financial statements of Steel Corp. reveals the
following:

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Current Account at BPI P(30,000)


Current account at Maybank 135,000
Treasury bills (acquired 3 months before maturity) 300,000
Treasury bills (maturity date is 12/31/14) 1,500,000
Payroll account 390,000
Foreign bank account – restricted 2,000,000
Postage stamps 1,250
Employee’s postdated check 4,500
IOU from vice president 8,000
Credit memo from a supplier for a purchase return 8,100
Money order 12,900
Petty cash fund (P3,000 in currency and expense receipts for P12,000) 15,000

1. What amount should be reported as cash and cash equivalents in the Dec. 31,2013
statement of financial position?

B. The cash account in the current asset section of the balance sheet for AA Co. showed a
balance of P555,000. It was found to include the following items:

Petty cash fund (P1,000 is in the form of paid vouchers) P 5,000


Checking account balance, per bank statement (a P25,000 check is still 255,000
outstanding)
Undeposited receipts, including a postdated check for P5,000 120,000
Currencies and coins awaiting deposit 55,000
Bond sinking fund 100,000
Check drawn by manager, returned by bank marked NSF 20,000

2. What is the correct cash balance?

C. The chief accountant of Clock Dairy’s Co. is determining the amount of cash and cash
equivalents to be reported on its December 31, 2013 statement of financial position. She
found out that the Cash and Cash Equivalents balance in the general ledger was composed
of the following items.

 Saving account of P900,000 and a commercial checking account with balance of P1,400,000
are held at Chinabank.
 Petty cash fund of P15,000; composed of expense receipts of P5,000; and bills and coins of
P9,850 at Dec. 31.
 Cash fund in savings account with BPI, P1,500,000 held for retirement of bonds payable,
due Dec. 31, 2020.
 Money market fund account held at BDO which permits Clock Dairy to write checks on this
balance, P2,000,000
 Three certificates of deposit with Metrobank, each totaling P1,000,000, two of which have
maturity of 120 days from date of placement (November 30, 2013); one has a maturity of 90
days (placed on Dec. 29, 2013).
 Payroll fund maintained with BDO, P6,000,000.

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She also obtained the following information:

 A customer’s check on hand dated January 10, 2014 for P320,000. The check was recorded
as collected in December and was included in the savings account with Chinabank.
 A check for P300,000 was issued to a supplier on December 29, 2013 and drawn from
Chinabank account. The check was dated Jan. 8, 2014 and was traced to have been entered
in the Dec. check register.
 Clock Dairy maintains a P5,000,000 cash balance at all time at Allied Bank to ensure future
credit availability.
 A check for P50,000 for adjustment in salaries of an employee for the month of November
was still on hand at Dec. 31, 2013. The check was verified to have been recorded in the cash
disbursement journal in December.

3. Compute for the amount of cash and cash equivalents to be reported on December 31,
2013 statement of financial position.

D. Mars Company’s checkbook balance at Dec. 31, 2011 was P50,000. In addition, Mars held
the following items in its safe on that date.

Check payable to Mars, dated Dec. 31 in


payment of a sale made in Dec. 2012 not
included in Dec. 31, checkbook balance
P 20,000
Check payable to Mars, deposited Dec. 15 but
returned by bank on Dec. 30 marked “NSF”. The
deposit and the return were both reflected in
the checkbook.
5,000
Check drawn on Mars Company’s account,
payable to a vendor, dated Dec. 30 but not yet
mailed to payee as of Dec. 31. The check is not
yet recorded.
3,000

4. Compute for the amount to be shown as cash on Mars’ statement of financial position at
Dec. 31, 2011.

E. The statement of financial position of Imation Company shows cash of P860,000. The
following items were found to comprise the total amount:

Checking account balance in PNB per bank statement (outstanding


checks of P34,000; deposit in transit of P25,000; service charge, P1500;
NSF checks, P2,450)
P 225,000
Petty cash fund (currencies and coins, P2,510; expense receipts, P2,100;
IOUs, P380) 5,000

Undeposited collections (of which P5,000 is in money orders, P3,000 in


traveler’s check and postdated checks of customers for P3,500)
75,000

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Bond sinking fund cash 125,000

Treasury bills with original maturity of 6 months and acquired 2 months


prior to maturity 50,000

Postdated checks received from customers at reporting date


25,000
Trust fund account, 30 days term
100,000
Travel advances
5,000
Savings account restricted for the payment of long term obligations

Total: 250,000
P860,000

5. Correct cash balance of the checking account with PNB


6. Correct petty cash fund balance
7. What amount of the undeposited collections is to be reported as cash?
8. Correct cash and cash equivalents

F. Hai – Co is reviewing the cash accounting for Hei – Co. Hai – Co’s review will focus on the
petty cash fund account and the bank reconciliation for the month ended June 30, 2013. She
has collected the following information from Hei – Co’s bookkeeper for this task.

Petty cash fund

1. The petty cash fund was established on June 3, in the amount of P 10,000

2. Expenditures from the fund by the custodian as of June 30, 2013, were evidenced by
approved petty cash vouchers for the following:
Office supplies P 3,920
IOUs from employees 1,200
Shipping charges 2,298
Other expenses 1,526

On June 30, the petty cash fund was replenished and increased to P 12,000; currency and coins in
the fund at that time totaled P 756.

Bank reconciliation

Debit Credit Balance


Balance, June 1 P 350, 760
Deposits P 1,120,000
Note payment direct from customer
(with interest of P 1,200)
37,200
Checks cleared during June 1,246,000
Bank service charges 1,080
Balance, June 30 ?

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Hei – Co’s Cash account

Balance, June 1, 2013 P 354,000


Deposits during June 1,240,000
Checks written during June ?
Balance, June 30 320,600

Deposits in transit are determined to be P 120,000 and checks outstanding at June 30 total P
34,000. Cash on hand (except petty cash) at June 30 is P 9,840.

9. What is the amount of petty cash shortage?


10. The journal entry to record the replenishment of and increase in the petty cash fund
includes a credit to cash of ?
11. Correct cash balance, June 30, 2013.

G. The auditor for Glaives Co. examined the petty cash fund immediately after the close of
business, July 31, 2013, the end of company’s natural business year. The petty cash
custodian presented the following during the count:

Currency P 1,650
Petty cash voucher:
Postage 420
Office supplies 900
Transportation 340
Repairs & maintenance 800
Advances to office staff 1,500
A check drawn by Glaives, payable to the petty
cash custodian 7,200
Postage stamps 300
An employee check, returned by bank, marked
NSF 1,000
An envelope containing currency for a gift for a
retiring employee 1,890

The general ledger shows an imprest petty cash fund balance of P 16,000.

12. How much is the petty cash shortage or overage?


13. What is the adjusted balance of petty cash fund at July 31, 2013?

H. The following information is included in Wisdom Corp.’s bank statement for the month of
April:

A customer’s check has been marked “NSF”


P 13,000
Bank service charge for April 1,200

In comparing the bank statement to the company’s cash records, you found:

Outstanding checks on April 30 P 184,000

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Deposits made but are not yet shown in the


April bank statement 14,000

The deposits in transit and outstanding checks have been correctly taken up in the company’s
books. You also found a customer’s check for P 17,400 that had not yet been deposited and had not
been recorded in Wisdom’s books. Your client’s book show a cash balance of P 36,420.

14. What is Wisdom’s correct cash balance?

I. A company is reconciling its bank statement with internal records. The cash balance per the
company’s books is P 45,000. There are P 5,000 of bank charges not yet recorded, P 7,500 of
outstanding checks, P12,500 of deposits in transit, and P15,000 of bank credits and
collections not yet taken up in the company’s books.

15. What is the cash balance per bank?

J. The following information is shown in the accounting records of Bonus Inc.,:

Dec. 31 Jan. 1
Cash ? P 186,000
Accounts receivable 273,000 201,000
Merchandise inventory 234,000 258,000
Accounts payable 144,000 159,000

Total sales and cost of sales for 2013 were P 2,394,000 and P 1,749,000, respectively. All sales and
purchases were made on credit. Various operating expenses of P 321,000 were paid in cash.
Assume that there were no other pertinent transactions. Compute for the…

16. Collections from accounts receivables


17. Payment of accounts payable
18. Cash balance on Dec. 31, 2013

K. Yohoy Co., keeps all its cash in checking account. An examination of the company’s
accounting records and bank statement for the month ended Dec. 31, 2014 revealed the
following information:

The cash balance as of Dec. 31 represents:

Bank statement balance P 84,690


Book balance 85,240

A deposit of P 9,500 through the bank’s night depository box on Dec. 29 did not appear on the bank
statement. The bank statement shows that on Dec. 28, 2014, the bank collected a note for Yohoy
and credited the proceeds of P 9,350 to the company’s account. The proceeds include P350 interest,
all of which Yohoy earned during the current accounting period. Yohoy has not yet recorded the
collection.

Checks outstanding on Dec. 31, 2014:


Check # 143 P 1,500
Check # 144 480

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Check # 121 720

 Yohoy discovered that check # 230, written in Dec. 2014 for P 1,830 in payment to a
supplier, had been recorded in the company’s records as P 1,380.
 Included with the Dec. 31, 2014 bank statement was an NSF check for P 2,500 that Yohoy
had received from Cu Co. on account on Dec. 19. Yohoy has not yet recorded the returned
check. The bank statement shows a P 150 service charge for December.

19. Adjusted cash balance


20. Net adjustment to cash

L. Judith Mae Borda Corp. misplaced all the bank statements for the past years. You reviewed
the accounting records and discovered that the following journal entries were made to
reconcile the June 30, 2012 bank records and accounting records.

Accounts receivable 76,012


Miscellaneous expense 625
Notes receivable 10,000
Interest revenue 500
Cash 66,137

Pre-adjustment cash balance in the accounting records was P 371,023.50, outstanding checks were
P 10,375 and no other adjustments were required.

21. What is the balance of the cash account per bank statement as of June 30, 2012?

M. The following data pertaining to the cash transactions and bank accounts of O’rayt Co. for
July 2011 are as follows:

Cash balance per accounting records, July 31, 2011, P 17,194.

Cash balance per bank statement, July 31, 2011, P31,848.

Bank service charge for July, P 109.

Debit memo for printed checks delivered by the bank; the charge has not been recorded in the
accounting records, P 225.

Outstanding checks, July 31, 2011, P 6,728.

Deposit of July 31 not recorded by the bank until Aug. 1, P 4,880.

Proceeds of a bank loan on July 31 not recorded in the accounting records, net of P 300 interest,
P5,700.

Proceeds from customer’s promissory note, principal amount, P8,000, collected by the bank, not
taken up in the books, with P100 interest, P8,100.

Check # 2000 payable to a supplier entered in the accounting records as P 2,100 deducted in the
bank statement the erroneous amount of P 1,200.

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Stolen check lacking an authorized signature deducted from O’rayt’s account by the bank in error,
P800.

Customers check returned by the bank marked DAIF, indicating that the customer’s balance was
not adequate to cover the check. No entry has been made in the accounting records to record the
returned check, P760.

22. Adjusted cash balance as of July 31, 2011.

N. In comparing the balance per books of Maguindanao Company with the bank statement
obtained from the bank, together with the canceled checks and other memoranda at Dec. 31,
2013, you observed the following:

a) Balance per bank statement, P 892,346.30

b) Balance per books, P 590,884.60

c) Outstanding checks, 12/31/2013, P 333,788.20

d) Receipts of 12/31/13 deposited on 1/2/14, P 53,172.00

e) Service charge for Dec. 2013, P 225.00

f) Proceeds of bank loan, 12/15/13 omitted from company’s records, net of P 3,000 charge, P
97,000
g) Deposit of 12/23/13 omitted from the bank statement, P 28,924.10

h) Check of Italy products charged back on 12/22/13 for lack of counter signature,
redeposited on 1/5/14. No entry was made for the charge back or the redeposit. P 8,737.40

i) Error on bank statement in entering deposit of 12/16/13:


Correct amount P 31,824.00
Entered in statement P 31,814.00

j) Check #6970 of Maguinbanao co. charged in error to the company’s account, P 26,900

k) Proceeds of note of B. Christian & Co. collected by bank on 12/1/13 not entered on books,
inclusive of P 400 interest and net of service charge of P50. P 20,350.

l) Erroneous debit memo of 12/23/13 to charge company’s account with settlement of bank
loan which was paid by check # 3115 on same date, P50,000.

m) Error on bank statement in entering deposit of 12/4/13:


Entered as P 48,171.00
Correct amount, 48,071.00

n) Deposit of Maguinbanao co. on 12/7/13 credited in error in the company’s account, P


18,192.00

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23. Determine the correct cash balance of Maguindanao Co. at Dec. 31, 2013.

O. Insatiable Company’s general ledger showed a balance of P1,602,500 in its Cash account on
December 31, 2012 which consisted of the following items: (The company adopts the policy
of classifying as cash equivalents investment instruments with maturity of not more than 90
days)

Checking account with Security Bank, General Account P475,000


Checking account with Security Bank, Payroll Account (25,000)
Certificate of deposit with BPI, term 180 days
placed on December 1, 2012 125,000
Checking account with BPI 350,000
Sinking fund cash 250,000
Savings account with May Bank (closed) 120,000
Petty cash fund 25,000
Two year treasury bonds issued on March 1, 2011
but acquired on March 1, 2012 and maturing
on February 28, 2013 75,000
Cash surrender value of life insurance contracts 22,500
Travel advances of salesmen 20,000
Undeposited receipts 45,000
Customers checks dated January 20, 2013 15,000
Customers checks dated December 12, 2012 but returned
due to insufficiency of fund 5,000
Savings deposit with BDO earmarked for the
acquisition of equipment which is expected
To be disbursed in March, 2013 100,000
Total P1,602,500

The following information were gathered at year-end that pertains to the above:
a. Included among the checks drawn against Security Bank general account during December
and recorded also in December are:
 Check # 3144 written for P12,500 payable to ABC Trading was delivered on January
5, 2013
 Check # 4220 written for P24,000 payable to Dac Trading was certified by the bank
but this check remained outstanding at reporting date.
 Check # 8603 written for p7,500 payable to Roshan Trading dated January 26, 2013
Included among the December receipts recorded in the Security Bank general account are
as follows:
 Customers checks for P15,000 dated January 30, 2013
 Customers check for P25,000 dated December 14, 2012 but returned by the bank
due to insufficiency of fund
 Money orders for P1,000
 Travelers’ check for $2,000 converted to peso value of P84,000
b. The company has an overdraft line with Security Bank hence the right of offset exists.
c. Included in the checking account with BPI is compensating balances amounting to P150,000
against long-term borrowing. The compensating balances are not legally restricted.
d. Petty cash fund consists of currencies and coins of P11,350; unreplenished vouchers for
expenses, P10,200; cash advances of employees, P3,450.

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24. Correct cash balance of the checking account with Security Bank at December 31, 2012
25. Correct cash balance of the checking account with BPI at December 31, 2012
26. Correct petty cash fund balance at December 31, 2012
27. Correct cash balance at December 31, 2012
28. Correct cash and cash equivalents at December 31, 2012

P. The trial balance of Reyes Co. at Dec. 31, 2013 includes the following accounts:

Petty cash fund P 5,000


Cash on hand 19,700
Metrobank, Current Account 110,200
Allied bank, General Account 162,000
Allied bank, Payroll Account (4,000)
Security bank, Savings account 65,000

a. The petty cash fund consisted the following items as of Dec. 31, 2013:
 Currency and coins, P 1,490
 Employees’ advances, with no supporting vouchers, P880
 Currency in an envelope marked “collections for charity” with employees’ name
attached, P 160
 Unreplenished petty cash vouchers, P 740
 Replenishment check drawn by Reyes payable to the petty cashier, P1,830

b. Cash on hand includes the following items:


 Customer’s check for P5,000 returned by bank on Dec. 26, 2013 due to insufficient
funds, but subsequently redeposited and cleared by the bank on Jan. 10, 2014.
 Postal money orders received from customers, P2,800.
 Customer’s check for P1,500 dated Jan. 10,2014 received Dec. 23, 2013.
c. Included among the checks drawn by Reyes against the Metrobank current account and
recorded in Dec. 2013 are the following:
 Check #2911 written and dated Dec. 23, 2013 and delivered to payee on Jan. 3,
2014, P2,500
 Check #2186 written Dec. 25, 2013, dated Jan. 30, 2014, delivered to payee on Dec.
28, 2013, P4,300.
d. The credit balance in Allied bank payroll account represents checks drawn in excess of the
deposit balance. The checks are still outstanding at Dec. 31, 2013. A right of offset exists in
the agreement between Allied bank and its depositors.

e. The savings account deposit in Security bank was a fund set aside by the Board of directors
for the acquisition of new machine. The company expects to disburse this amount on Jan. 2,
2014.

29. Amount of petty cash (shortage) or overage


30. Correct amount of cash

Q. The bank statement of Appetite Corp. for April, 2013 showed an ending balance of
P169,263. Deposit in transit on Apr. 30 was P18,200. Outstanding checks as of Apr. 30 were
P59,435. During the month of April, the bank charged back NSF checks in the amount of

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P3,435 of which P 1,835 had been redeposited by Apr. 30. The company made no entry for
the return and for the redeposit of the checks.

On Apr. 23, the bank charged Appetite Corp.’s account for a P2,200 item which should have
been charged against the account of Ammetite Corp.; the error was not detected by the
bank. During April, the proceeds from notes collected by the bank for Appetite Corp. were
P7,548 and bank charges for this service were P180.

31. Unadjusted cash balance per books at April 30, 2013.

R. On July 5, 2013, Smee Corp. received its bank statement for the month ending June 30. The
statement showed a P209,500 balance while the cash account balance on June 30 was
P35,000. In reconciling the balances, the auditor discovered that:
1. The June 30 collections of P176,000 were recorded on the books but were not deposited
until July.
2. The bank service charges for the month of June totaled P3,000
3. A paid check for P24,300 was entered incorrectly in the cash payments journal as
P34,200.

32. What is the total outstanding checks at June 30, 2013?

S. The bank statement for the current account of sir George James Corp. showed a Dec. 31,
2013, balance of P585,284. Information that might be useful in preparing a bank
reconciliation is as follows:

a) Outstanding checks were P52,810.

b) The Dec. 31, 2013, cash receipts of P23,000 were not deposited in the bank until Jan. 4,
2014.

c) One check written in payment of rent P8,940 was correctly recorded by the bank but was
recorded by sir George as a P9,840 disbursement.

d) In accordance with prior authorization, the bank withdrew P18,000 directly from the
current account as payment on a mortgage note payable. The interest portion of that
payment was P14,000. Sir George has made no entry to record the automatic payment.

e) Bank service charges of P740 were listed on the bank statement.

f) A deposit of P35,000 was recorded by the bank on Dec. 13, but it did not belong to sir
George James.

g) The bank statement included a charge of P3,400 for an NSF check. The company will seek
payment from the customer.

h) Sir George maintains an P8,000 petty cash fund that was appropriately reimbursed at the
end of December.

i) According to instructions from sir George on Dec. 29, the bank withdrew P400,000 from the
account and purchased treasury bills for sir George. The company recorded the transaction

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in its books on Dec. 31 when it received notice from the bank. Half of the treasury bills
mature in three months and the other half in four months.

Compute for:
33. The cash in bank balance per books on Dec. 31, 2013.
34. The adjusted cash in bank balance on Dec. 31, 2013.
35. The amount to be reported as cash and cash equivalents on its Dec. 31, 2013 statement
of financial position.

T. EMA Co. was organized on Jan. 13, 2011. The following items are from the company’s trial
balance on December 31, 2011.

Ordinary share capital P 1,500,000


Share premium 150,000
M. Inventory 69,000
Land 1,000,000
Building 1,400,000
Furniture and fixtures 367,000
Accounts receivable 165,400
Accounts payable 389,650
Notes payable 500,000
Sales 6,235,200
Operating expenses 1,005,150 *

*including depreciation of P 400,000.

Additional information is as follows:


1. Deposits in transit, Dec. 31 P 384,660
2. Service charge for Dec. 2,000
3. Outstanding checks, Dec. 31 475,000
4. Bank balance, Dec. 31 892,000
5. EMA’s mark up on sales is 30%

Compute for
36. The total collections from sales
37. The total payments for merchandise purchases
38. The total cash receipts per books
39. The total cash disbursements per books
40. The cash balance per books on Dec. 31
41. The adjusted cash balance on Dec. 31

U. Your audit of the cash account of CG corp. disclosed the following information:

1. Cash in bank balance per books, Dec. 31, 2013 P 35,000


2. Bank statement balance, Dec. 31, 2013 60,000
3. Note collected by bank in Dec. (principal plus P800 interest, 27,600
less P200 collection fee)
4. Debit memo for a checkbook ?
5. Deposits in transit, Dec. 31, 2013 15,200
6. Transposition error made by bank in recording deposit of

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Dec. 25:
Correct amount: 45,000 ?
Recorded as 54,000
7. Erroneous bank debit 26,700
8. Included in the cash in bank account is petty cash fund of
P10,000. Your count on Dec. 31, 2013 revealed the following
fund items:
Currency and coins P 3,000
Supplies 2,400
Transportation 100
IOUs 4,000 ?
9. Erroneous bank credit 11,000
10. Outstanding checks 39,400*
* including a certified check of P10,000

Compute for
42. The principal amount of the note collected by bank in December.
43. The adjusted cash in bank balance at Dec. 31, 2013.
44. The cost of checkbook
45. The amount of petty cash shortage at Dec. 31, 2013
46. The adjusted petty cash balance

V. HJE Co, organized on Apr. 3, 2013, has a very poor internal control system. The company’s
cashier is also its accountant. After 8 months of operations, the company’s manager
suspects that the cashier-accountant has been misappropriating company collections. You
have been engaged to audit the company’s accounts to determine the extent of fraud, if any.

You started the audit on Nov. 15. On that date, the cash on hand per surprise count was
P5,140. Also on that date, the bank confirmed that the balance of the company’s current
account was P26,328. You also obtained the information that the cashier’s accountability is
P151,228. Your examination of the records reveals that a check for P1,852 was outstanding
on Nov. 15, the company’s mark up is 40% of sales.

Further examination of the company’s records reveals the following balances at Nov. 15,
2013:
Ordinary share capital P300,000
Share premium 20,000
Real property purchased for cash 200,000
Mortgage payable 80,000
Furniture and fixtures (of the acquisition cost, P6,000
remains unpaid as of Nov. 15) 29,000
Notes payable – BPI 32,000
Accounts payable – trade 46,284
Expenses paid (excluding purchases) 60,756
M. inventory at cost 93,920
Accounts receivable – trade 85,380
Total sales 340,000

Compute for
47. The amount paid for inventory purchases

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48. The collections from customers


49. The adjusted bank balance as of Nov. 15, 2013
50. The cash shortage as of Nov. 15, 2013

W. In auditing the VO Co., you obtained the bank statement, canceled checks and other
memoranda which relate to the company’s bank account for December 2013. In reconciling
the bank balance with that shown on the company’s books, you observed the facts set forth
below:

1. Balance per bank statement, 12/31/13 P 47,174

2. Balance per books, 12/31/13 P19,289

3. Outstanding checks 12/31/13 P63,000

4. Receipts of 12/31/13, deposited 1/3/14 P 6,260

5. Service charge for November, per bank memo of 12/17/13 P1,000

6. Proceeds of bank loan, 12/6/13, discounted for 3 months at 18% per annum, omitted
from company books P47,750

7. Deposit of 12/22/13, omitted from bank statement P9,170

8. Check of Co Co., returned on 12/22/13, for absence of counter-signature and


redeposited with complete signature on 1/2/13 no entry on the books having been
made for the return or redeposit P 77,320

9. Error on bank statement in entering deposit of 12/19/13:


Correct amount P1,600
Entered in statement 160

10. Check # 13221 of XY Co, charged by bank in error to company’s account P13,600

11. Proceeds of note of QR Co, collected by bank, 12/14/13, not entered in cash book
(principal amount of P25,000 plus interest of P1,125, less collection fee) P25,625

12. Erroneous debit memo of 12/30/12, to charge company’s account with settlement of
bank loan which was paid by check # 11002 on same date P5,000

13. Error on bank statement in entering deposit of 12/2/13:


Entered as 14,200.62
Correct amount P12,400.62

14. Deposit of BV Co. of 12/1/13, credited in error to this co. P3,500

Compute for
51. The principal amount of the loan obtained from bank in December
52. The amount of collection fee
53. The adjusted cash in bank balance as of Dec. 31, 2013

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BCSV

54. The net adjustment in cash in bank per ledger as of Dec. 31, 2013
~END OF ACC 1A&B~

“For the things we have to learn before we can do them, we learn by


doing them.”
~ Aristotle

18
BCSV

*Suggested Key answers*

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BCSV

I. THEORIES
1. D 13.D
2. A 14. B
3. D 15. C
4. D 16. B
5. B 17. B
6. C 18. C
7. B 19. A
8. D 20. D
9. C 21. C
10. A 22. A
11. B 23. D
12. B 24. C
25. C
II. PROBLEM SOLVING
1. P840,900 26. P11,350
2. P404,000 27. P836,350
3. P16,339,850 28. P836,350
4. P70,000 29. P(60)
5. P216,000 30. P291,520
6. P2,510 31. P124,460
7. P71,500 32. P343,600
8. P440,010 33. P541,514
9. P(300) 34. P520,474
10. P11,244 35. P728,474
11. P368,720 36. P6,069,800
12. P(2,190) 37. P4,043,990
13. P8,850 38. P8,219,800
14. P39,620 39. P7,416,140
15. P50,000 40. P803,660
16. P2,322,000 41. P801.660
17. P1,740,000 42. P27,000
18. P447,000 43. P52,500
19. P91,490 44. P 100
20. P6,250 45. P(500)
21. P315,261.50 46. P3,000
22. P29,900 47. P251,636
23. P699,272.20 48. P254,620
24. P430,000 49. P29,616
25. P350,000 50. 121,612
51. P50,000
52. P500
53. P14,344
54. P (4,945)

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