Page 92 - Accounting Principles (A Business Perspective)
P. 92

This book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 License

                                  MICROTRAIN COMPANY
                                      Trial Balance
                                    December 31, 2010
          Acct.
          No.  Account Title                           Debits      Credits
          100  Cash                                    $ 8,250
          103  Accounts Receivable                     5,200
          107  Supplies on Hand                        1,400
          108  Prepaid Insurance                       2,400
          112  Prepaid Rent                            1,200
          150  Trucks                                  40,000
          200  Accounts Payable                                    $   730
          216  Unearned Service Fees                               4,500
          300  Capital Stock                                       50,000
          320  Dividends                               3,000
          400  Service Revenue                                     10,700
          505  Advertising Expense                     50
          506  Gas and Oil Expense                     680
          507  Salaries Expense                        3,600
          511  Utilities Expense                       150
            Exhibit 13: Trail balance

            MicroTrain paid USD 2,000 cash with the balance due on 2011 March 3. The general journal entry for
          MicroTrain Company is:
                                                            Debit   Credit
          2011
          Jan.  2  Equipment (+A)                           8,000
                  Cash (-A)                                         2,000
                  Accounts Payable (+L)                             6,000
                  Training equipment purchased from Wilson Company.

            Note that the firm credits two accounts, Cash and Accounts Payable, in this one entry. However, the dollar totals
          of the debits and credits are equal.
            Periodically, accountants use a trial balance to test the equality of their debits and credits. A trial balance is a
          listing of the ledger accounts and their debit or credit balances to determine that debits equal credits in the
          recording process. The accounts appear in this order: assets, liabilities, stockholders' equity, dividends, revenues,
          and expenses. Within the assets category, the most liquid (closest to becoming cash) asset appears first and the

          least liquid appears last. Within the liabilities, those liabilities with the shortest maturities appear first. Study
          Exhibit 13, the trial balance for MicroTrain Company. Note the listing of the account numbers and account titles on
          the left, the column for debit balances, the column for credit balances, and the equality of the two totals.
            When the trial balance does not balance, try re-totaling the two columns. If this step does not locate the error,
          divide the difference in the totals by 2 and then by 9. If the difference is divisible by 2, you may have transferred a
          debit-balanced account to the trial balance as a credit, or a credit-balanced account as a debit. When the difference
          is divisible by 2, look for an amount in the trial balance that is equal to one-half of the difference. Thus, if the

          difference is USD 800, look for an account with a balance of USD 400 and see if it is in the wrong column.
            If the difference is divisible by 9, you may have made a transposition error in transferring a balance to the trial
          balance or a slide error. A transposition error occurs when two digits are reversed in an amount (e.g. writing 753 as



          Accounting Principles: A Business Perspective     93                                      A Global Text
   87   88   89   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   97