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P10-4 (LO1,4,6) GROUPWORK (Dispositions, Including Condemnation, Demolition, and
Trade-In) Presented below is a schedule of property dispositions for Hollerith Co.
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Schedule of Property Dispositions
            Cost     Accumulated Depreciation Cash Proceeds Fair Value Nature of Disposition
Land        $40,000 —                            $31,000        $31,000     Condemnation
Building    15,000 —                               3,600        —           Demolition
Warehouse 70,000 $16,000                          74,000         74,000     Destruction by fire
Machine     8,000      2,800                         900          7,200     Trade-in
Furniture   10,000   7,850                       —                3,100     Contribution
Automobile 9,000       3,460                       2,960          2,960     Sale
The following additional information is available.
Land: On February 15, a condemnation award was received as consideration for unimproved
land held primarily as an investment, and on March 31, another parcel of unimproved land to be
held as an investment was purchased at a cost of $35,000.
       The loss on the condemnation of the land of $9000 ($40000-$31000) should be reported
as another income and expense item on the income statement. The $35000 land purchase has no
income statement effect.
Building: On April 2, land and building were purchased at a total cost of $75,000, of which 20%
was allocated to the building on the corporate books. The real estate was acquired with the
intention of demolishing the building, and this was accomplished during the month of November.
Cash proceeds received in November represent the net proceeds from demolition of the building.
        There is no recognized gain or loss on the demolition of the building. The entire purchase
cost ($15000), decreased by the demolition proceeds ($3,600), is allocated to land.
Warehouse: On June 30, the warehouse was destroyed by fire. The warehouse was purchased
January 2, 2014, and had depreciated $16,000. On December 27, the insurance proceeds and
other funds were used to purchase a replacement warehouse at a cost of $90,000.
        The gain on the destruction of the warehouse should be reported as another income and
expense item. The gain is computed as follows:
           Insurance proceeds.......................................               $74,000
           Deduct: Cost................................................... $70,000
                      Less: Accumulated depreciation....                   $16,000  54,000
           Realized gain.................................................           $20,000
Some may think that a portion of this gain should be deferred because the proceeds are
reinvested in similar assets. We do not believe such an approach should be permitted. Deferral of
the gain in this situation is not permitted under IFRS.
Machine: On December 26, the machine was exchanged for another machine having a fair value
of $6,300 and cash of $900 was received. (The exchange lacks commercial substance.)
       The unrecognized gain on the transaction would be computed as follows:
         Fair value of old machine.............................               $7,200
         Deduct: Book value of old machine
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                      Cost...................................................    $8,000
                      Less: Accumulated depreciation...                          2,800            5,200
            Total gain........................................................                    $2,000
This gain would be deducted from the fair value of the new machine in computing the new
machines cost. The cost of the new machine would be capitalized at $4,300.
          Fair value of new machine..............................................................        $6,300
          Less: gain deferred...........................................................................  $2,000
          Cost of new machine.......................................................................      $4,300
Furniture: On August 15, furniture was contributed to a qualified charitable organization. No
other contributions were made or pledged during the year.
        The contribution of the furniture would be reported as a contribution expense of $3100
with a related gain on disposition of furniture of $950: $3100 - ($10000-$7850). The
contribution expense and the related gain may be netted.
Automobile: On November 3, the automobile was sold to Jared Winger, a stockholder.
        The loss on sale of the automobile of $2580: [$2960-($9000-$3460)] should be reported
in the other income and expense section.
P10-6 (LO1,3) (Interest During Construction) Grieg Landscaping began construction of a new
plant on December 1, 2017. On this date, the company purchased a parcel of land for $139,000
in cash. In addition, it paid $2,000 in surveying costs and $4,000 for a title insurance policy. An
old dwelling on the premises was demolished at a cost of $3,000, with $1,000 being received
from the sale of materials.
        Architectural plans were also formalized on December 1, 2017, when the architect was
paid $30,000. The necessary building permits costing $3,000 were obtained from the city and
paid for on December 1 as well. The excavation work began during the first week in December
with payments made to the contractor in 2018 as follows.
The building was completed on July 1, 2018.
        To finance construction of this plant, Grieg borrowed $600,000 from the bank on
December 1, 2017. Grieg had no other borrowings. The $600,000 was a 10-year loan bearing
interest at 8%.
Compute the balance in each of the following accounts at December 31, 2017, and December 31,
2018. (Round amounts to the nearest dollar.)
         (a)Land.
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   (b)Buildings.
   (c)Interest Expense.
   (a) Land Account Balance 2017 and 2018
                                                                            139,0
Price
                                                                            00
                                                                              2,0
Survey Costs
                                                                            00
                                                                              4,0
Title Insurance Policy
                                                                            00
                                                                              3,0
Demolition Costs
                                                                            00
                                                                              (1,
Salvage of Materials
                                                                           000)
                                                                            147,0
        Land Cost
                                                                            00
Building (2017)
Expenditures (2017)
                                                     Weighted expenditure
         Date             Amount        Period
                           147,00
         1-Dec                              1/12     12,250
                            0
                            30,00
         1-Dec                              1/12     2,500
                            0
                              3,00
         1-Dec                              1/12     250
                            0
                           180,00
                                                     15,000
                            0
Building (2017)
Expenditures (2018)
                                                              Weighted
                                                             expenditure
          Date             Amount           Period
                                                                                    5
             1-Jan                    180,000             1/2   90,000
             1-Jan                     1,200              1/2   600
             1-Mar                    240,000             1/3   80,000
             1-May                    330,000             1/6   55,000
               1-Jul                  60,000              0     0
                                      811,200                   225,600
                 Account balances as of December 31, 2017 and December 31, 2018
                       (a) Land Account – 2017                      $147,000
                              Land Account – 2018                   $147,000
                       (b) Building – 2017                            $34,200
                              Building – 2018                       $682,248
                       (c) Interest Expense – 2017                     $2,800
                                Interest Expense – 2018               $29,952
Calculations
       Building – 2017 - 30,000 + 3,000 + 1,200 = $34,000
       Building – 2018 – 34,200 + 240,000 + 330,000 + 60,000 + 18, 048 = $682,248
Calculations for Interest Expense.
    15,000
       8%
     1,200 Interest to be Capitalized for 2017
   600,000
       8%
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    48,000
      1/12
     4,000
     1,200
     2,800 Interest expense for 2017
   225,600
       8%
    18,048 Interest to be Capitalized for 2018
   600,000
       8%
    18,048
    29,952 Interest expense for 2018
CA11-5 ETHICS (Depreciation Choice—Ethics) Jerry Prior, Beeler Corporation’s controller,
is concerned that net income may be lower this year. He is afraid upper-level management might
recommend cost reductions by laying off accounting staff, including him.
     Prior knows that depreciation is a major expense for Beeler. The company currently uses the
double-declining-balance method for both financial reporting and tax purposes, and he’s thinking
of selling equipment that, given its age, is primarily used when there are periodic spikes in
demand. The equipment has a carrying value of $2,000,000 and a fair value of $2,180,000. The
gain on the sale would be reported in the income statement. He doesn’t want to highlight this
method of increasing income. He thinks, “Why don’t I increase the estimated useful lives and the
salvage values? That will decrease depreciation expense and require less extensive disclosure,
since the changes are accounted for prospectively. I may be able to save my job and those of my
staff.”
Instructions
Answer the following questions.
   a. Who are the stakeholders in this situation?
       Prior, his staff, shareholders and even potential investors are the stakeholders in this
       situation.
   b. What are the ethical issues involved?
       Changing the salvage values and the estimated lives of the asset is the ethical issue. These
       changes will result in misrepresented financial statements. This situation would not give
       potential investors an honest representation of the business financially.
   c. What should Prior do?
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       If Prior decides to sell the equipment, he needs to make sure he is using the correct
       financial numbers. Regardless of the outcome, such as him or his staff losing their job,
       reporting the correct numbers of any sold assets is the ethical thing to do.
P12-2 (LO1,2,4,5) EXCEL (Accounting for Patents) Fields Laboratories holds a valuable
patent (No. 758-6002-1A) on a precipitator that prevents certain types of air pollution. Fields
does not manufacture or sell the products and processes it develops. Instead, it conducts research
and develops products and processes which it patents, and then assigns the patents to
manufacturers on a royalty basis. Occasionally it sells a patent. The history of Fields patent
number 758-6002-1A is as follows.
    Date       Activity                                                                    Cost
 2008–2009                    Research conducted to develop precipitator                   $384,000
 Jan. 2010                      Design and construction of a prototype                     87,600
March 2010                                 Testing of models                               42,000
  Jan. 2011      Fees paid engineers and lawyers to prepare patent application; patent 59,500
                                        granted June 30, 2011
 Nov. 2012     Engineering activity necessary to advance the design of the precipitator 81,500
               to the manufacturing stage
 Dec. 2013             Legal fees paid to successfully defend precipitator patent          42,000
 April 2014      Research aimed at modifying the design of the patented precipitator 43,000
 July 2018     Legal fees paid in unsuccessful patent infringement suit against a          34,000
               competitor
Fields assumed a useful life of 17 years when it received the initial precipitator patent. On
January 1, 2016, it revised its useful life estimate downward to 5 remaining years. Amortization
is computed for a full year if the cost is incurred prior to July 1, and no amortization for the year
if the cost is incurred after June 30. The company's year ends December 31.
Instructions
Compute the carrying value of patent No. 758-6002-1A on each of the following dates:
  (a) December 31, 2011 (b) December 31, 2015 (c) December 31, 2018.
  A) December 31, 2011
Costs to obtain patent, January, 2011                       59,500
2011 Amortization                               (3,500)
Carrying value, December 31, 2011                           56,000
   B) December 31, 2015
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January 1, 2012 carrying value of patent                56,000
2012 amortization                           (3,500)
2013 amortization                           (3,500)     (7,000)
       Subtotal                                         49,000
December 2013 legal fees to defend patent               42,000
Carrying value December 31, 2013                        91,000
2014 Amortization                           (6,500)
2015 Amortization                           (6,500)    (13,000)
Carrying Value December 31, 2015                       $78,000
    C) December 31, 2018
January 1, 2016 Carrying value                          78,000
2016 Amortization                           (15,600)
2017 Amortization                           (15,600)
2018 Amortization                           (15,600)   (46,800)
December 31, 2018 Carrying value                        31,200