Strickland Company owes \(200,000 plus \)18,000 of accrued interest to Moran State Bank. The debt is a 10-year, 10% note. During 2017, Strickland’s business deteriorated due to a faltering regional economy. On December 31, 2017, Moran State Bank agrees to accept an old machine and cancel the entire debt. The machine has a cost of \(390,000, accumulated depreciation of \)221,000, and a fair value of \(180,000.

Instructions

  1. Prepare journal entries for Strickland Company and Moran State Bank to record this debt settlement.
  2. How should Strickland report the gain or loss on the disposition of machine and on restructuring of debt in its 2017 income statement?
  3. Assume that, instead of transferring the machine, Strickland decides to grant 15,000 shares of its common stock (\)10 par) which has a fair value of $180,000 in full settlement of the loan obligation. If Moran State Bank treats Strickland’s stock as a trading investment, prepare the entries to record the transaction for both parties.

Short Answer

Expert verified
  1. Gain on disposal of machinery for Strickland Company is $11,000.
  2. Recorded in the income statement as ordinary gains.
  3. Paid-in-capital in excess of Par-common stock of Strickland Company is $30,000.

Step by step solution

01

Meaning of Journal Entry

A journal entry is a record of financial transactions kept in the books of accounts of an organization. There are debit and credit columns and narration of each transaction.

02

(a) Preparing journal entry

Transfer of property on December 31, 2017:

Strickland Company (Debtor):

Date

Particulars

Debit ($)

Credit ($)

Notes payable

200,000

Interest payable

18,000

Accumulated depreciation-Machinery

221,000

Machinery

390,000

Gain on disposal of machinery

11,000

Gain on the restructuring of debt

38,000

Working notes:

Calculation of gain on disposal of machinery

Gainondisposalofmachinery=Fairvalue-(Costofmachine-Accumulateddepriciation)=$180,000-($390,000-$221,000)=$11,000

Calculation of gain on the restricting of debt

Gainonrestructingofdebt=(Companyowns+Accuredinterest)-Fairvalue=($200,000+$18,000)-$180,000=$38,000

Moran State Bank (Creditor):

Date

Particulars

Debit ($)

Credit ($)

Machinery

180,000

Allowance for doubtful accounts

38,000

Notes receivables

200,000

Interest receivables

18,000

03

(b) Reporting of gain or loss on the machine's disposition and on restricting debt

The income statement should include "Profit on Disposal of Machinery" and "Profit on Restructuring of Debt" as ordinary gains.

04

(c) Preparing journal entry

Strickland Company (Debtor):

Date

Particulars

Debit ($)

Credit ($)

Notes payable

200,000

Interest payable

18,000

Common stock

150,000

Paid-in-capital in excess of

Par-common stock

30,000

Gain on restricting debt

38,000

Moran State Bank (Creditor):

Date

Particulars

Debit ($)

Credit ($)

Equity investments

180,000

Allowance for doubtful accounts

38,000

Notes receivable

200,000

Interest receivable

18,000

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Most popular questions from this chapter

Question: What are the general rules for measuring and recognizing gain or loss by both the debtor and the creditor in a troubled-debt restructuring involving a modification of terms?

What disclosures are required relative to long-term debt and sinking fund requirements?

(Effective-Interest Method) Samantha Cordelia, an intermediate accounting student, is having difficulty amortizing bond premiums and discounts using the effective-interest method. Furthermore, she cannot understand why GAAP requires that this method be used instead of the straight-line method. She has come to you with the following problem, looking for help.

On June 30, 2017, Hobart Company issued \(2,000,000 face value of 11%, 20-year bonds at \)2,171,600, a yield of 10%. Hobart Company uses the effective-interest method to amortize bond premiums or discounts. The bonds pay semiannual interest on June 30 and December 31. Prepare an amortization schedule for four periods.

BE14-2 (L01) The Colson Company issued $300,000 of 10% bonds on January 1, 2017. The bonds are due January 1, 2022, with interest payable each July 1 and January 1. The bonds are issued at face value. Prepare Colson’s journal entries for (a) the January issuance, (b) the July 1 interest payment, and (c) the December 31 adjusting entry.

Fallen Company commonly issues long-term notes payable to its various lenders. Fallen has had a pretty good credit rating such that its effective borrowing rate is quite low (less than 8% on an annual basis). Fallen has elected to use the fair value option for the long-term notes issued to Barclay’s Bank and has the following data related to the carrying and fair value for these notes. Any changes in fair value are due to changes in market rates, not credit risk.

Carrying Value

Fair Value

December 31, 2017

\(54,000

\)54,000

December 31, 2018

44,000

42,500

December 31, 2019

36,000

38,000

Instructions

(a) Prepare the journal entry at December 31 (Fallen’s year-end) for 2017, 2018, and 2019, to record the fair value option for these notes.

(b) At what amount will the note be reported on Fallen’s 2018 balance sheet?

(c) What is the effect of recording the fair value option on these notes on Fallen’s 2019 income?

(d) Assuming that general market interest rates have been stable over the period, does the fair value data for the notes indicate that Fallen’s creditworthiness has improved or declined in 2019? Explain.

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