Accounting Sample Transaction
The fourth transaction occurs on December 3, when a customer gives
Direct Delivery a check for $10 to deliver two parcels on that day.
Because of double entry, we know there must be a minimum of two accounts
involved—one of the accounts must be debited, and one of the accounts
must be credited.
Because Direct Delivery
received $10, it must
debit the account
Cash. It must also
credit
a second account for $10. The second account will be Service Revenues,
an income statement account. The reason Service Revenues is
credited is because Direct Delivery must report that it
earned
$10 (not because it received $10). Recording revenues when they are
earned results from a basic accounting principle known as the
revenue
recognition principle. The following tip reflects that principle.
Revenues accounts are credited when the company earns a fee (or sells merchandise) regardless of whether cash is received at the time.
Here are the two parts of the transaction as they would look in the
general journal format:
| Account Name |
Debit | Credit |
Accounting Sample Transaction
Let's assume that on December 3 the company gets its second
customer—a local company that needs to have 50 parcels delivered
immediately. Joe's price of $250 is very appealing, so Joe's company is
hired to deliver the parcels. The customer tells Joe to submit an
invoice for the $250, and they will
pay it within seven days.
Joe delivers the 50 parcels on December 3 as agreed, meaning that on December 3 Direct Delivery has
earned $250. Hence the $250 is reported as revenues on
December 3, even though the company did not receive any cash on that day. The
effort
needed to complete the job was done on December 3. (Depositing the
check for $250 in the bank when it arrives seven days later is not
considered to take any effort.)
Let's identify the two accounts involved and determine which needs a debit and which needs a credit.
Because Direct Delivery has earned the fees, one account will be a
revenues account, such as Service Revenues. (If you refer back to the
last
TIP,
you will read that revenue accounts —such as Service Revenues—are
usually credited, meaning the second account will need to be debited.)
In the general journal format, here's what we have identified so far:
| Account Name |
Debit | Credit |
We know that the unnamed account cannot be Cash.
| Account Name |
Debit | Credit |
Again, reporting revenues when they are earned results from the basic accounting principle known as the
revenue recognition principle.
Accounting Sample Transaction
For simplicity, let's assume that the only expense incurred by Direct
Delivery so far was a fee to a temporary help agency for a person to
help Joe deliver parcels on December 3. The
temp agency fee is $80 and
is due by December 12.
If a company does not pay cash immediately, you cannot credit Cash.
But because the company owes someone the money for its purchase, we say
it has an
obligation or
liability to pay. Most accounts
involved with obligations have the word "payable" in their name, and one
of the most frequently used accounts is
Accounts Payable. Also keep in
mind that expenses are almost always
debited.
The accounts and amounts for the temporary help are:
| Account Name |
Debit | Credit |
| Temporary Help Expense |
80 |
|
Expenses are (almost) always debited.
If a company does not pay cash right away for an expense or for an asset, you cannot credit Cash. Because the company owes
someone the money for its purchase, we say it has an obligation or
liability to pay. The most likely liability account involved in business
obligations is Accounts Payable.
Revenues and expenses appear on the income statement as shown below:
Direct Delivery, Inc.
Income Statement
For the Three Days Ended December 3, 2011
|
Service Revenues | $ 260 |
Temporary Help Expense | 80 |
| Net Income | $ 180 |
|
After the entries through December 3 have been recorded, the balance sheet will look like this:
Direct Delivery, Inc.
Balance Sheet
December 3, 2011
|
Assets |
|
|
Liabilities & Stockholders' Equity |
|
| Cash | $ 4,810 |
|
Liabilities |
|
| Accounts Receivable | 250 |
|
| Accounts Payable | $ 80 |
| Prepaid Insurance | 1,200 |
|
Stockholders' Equity |
|
| Vehicles | 14,000 |
|
| Common Stock | 20,000 |
|
|
|
|
| Retained Earnings | 180 |
|
|
|
|
|
| Total Stockholders' Equity | 20,180 |
Total Assets |
$ 20,260 |
|
Total Liab. & Stockholders' Equity |
$ 20,260 |
|
Notice that the
year-to-date net income
(bottom line of the income statement) increased Stockholders' Equity by
the same amount, $180. This connection between the income statement and
balance sheet is important. For one, it keeps the balance sheet and the
accounting equation in balance. Secondly, it demonstrates that
revenues will cause the stockholders' equity to increase and expenses
will cause stockholders' equity to decrease. After the end of the year
financial statements are prepared, you will see that the income
statement accounts (revenue accounts and expense accounts) will be
closed or zeroed out and their balances will be transferred into the
Retained Earnings
account. This will mean the revenue and expense accounts will start
the new year with zero balances—allowing the company "to keep score" for
the new year.
Marilyn suggested that perhaps this introduction was enough material
for their first meeting. She wrote out the following notes, summarizing
for Joe the important points of their discussion:
- When a company pays cash for something, the company will credit Cash and will have to debit a second account. Assuming that a company prepares monthly financial statements—
- If the amount is used up or will expire in the current month, the account to be debited will be an expense account. (Advertising Expense, Rent Expense, Wages Expense are three examples.)
- If the amount is not used up or does not expire in the current month, the account to be debited will be an asset account. (Examples are Prepaid Insurance, Supplies, Prepaid Rent, Prepaid Advertising, Prepaid Association Dues, Land, Buildings, and Equipment.)
- If the amount reduces a company's obligations, the account to be debited will be a liability account. (Examples include Accounts Payable, Notes Payable, Wages Payable, and Interest Payable.)
- When a company receives cash, the company will debit Cash and will have to credit another account. Assuming that a company will prepare monthly financial statements—
- If the amount received is from a cash sale, or for a
service that has just been performed but has not yet been recorded, the
account to be credited is a revenue account such as Service Revenues or Fees Earned.
- If the amount received is an advance payment for a service that has not yet been performed or earned, the account to be credited is Unearned Revenue.
- If the amount received is a payment from a customer
for a sale or service delivered earlier and has already been recorded as
revenue, the account to be credited is Accounts Receivable.
- If the amount received is the proceeds from the company signing a promissory note, the account to be credited is Notes Payable.
- If the amount received is an investment of
additional money by the owner of the corporation, a stockholders' equity
account such as Common Stock is credited.
- Revenues are recorded as Service Revenues or Sales when the service or sale has been performed, not when the cash is received. This reflects the basic accounting principle known as the revenue recognition principle.
- Expenses are matched with revenues or with the period of time shown in the heading of the income statement, not in the period when the expenses were paid. This reflects the basic accounting principle known as the matching principle.
- The financial statements also reflect the basic accounting principle known as the cost principle. This means assets are shown on the balance sheet at their original cost or less
and not at their current value. The income statement expenses also
reflect the cost principle. For example, the depreciation expense is
based on the original cost of the asset being depreciated and not on the current replacement cost.