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(Purchases by Deferred Payment, Lump-Sum, and Nonmonetary Exchanges) Klamath Company, a manufacturer of ballet shoes, is experiencing a period of sustained growth. In an effort to expand its production capacity to meet the increased demand for its product, the company recently made several acquisitions of plant and equipment. Rob Joffrey, newly hired in the position of fixed-asset accountant, requested that Danny Nolte, Klamath’s controller, review the following transactions.

Transaction 1: On June 1, 2017, Klamath Company purchased equipment from Wyandot Corporation. Klamath issued a \(28,000, 4-year, zero-interest-bearing note to Wyandot for the new equipment. Klamath will pay off the note in four equal installments due at the end of each of the next 4 years. At the date of the transaction, the prevailing market rate of interest for obligations of this nature was 10%. Freight costs of \)425 and installation costs of \(500 were incurred in completing this transaction. The appropriate factors for the time value of money at a 10% rate of interest are given below.

Future value of \)1 for 4 periods

1.46

Future value of an ordinary annuity for 4 periods

4.64

Present value of \(1 for 4 periods

0.68

Present value of an ordinary annuity for 4 periods

3.17

Transaction 2: On December 1, 2017, Klamath Company purchased several assets of Yakima Shoes Inc., a small shoe manufacturer whose owner was retiring. The purchase amounted to \)220,000 and included the assets listed below. Klamath Company engaged the services of Tennyson Appraisal Inc., an independent appraiser, to determine the fair values of the assets which are also presented below.

Yakima Book Value

Fair Value

Inventory

\( 60,000

\) 50,000

Land

40,000

80,000

Buildings

70,000

120,000

\(170,000

\)250,000

During its fiscal year ended May 31, 2018, Klamath incurred \(8,000 for interest expense in connection with the financing of these assets.

Transaction 3: On March 1, 2018, Klamath Company exchanged a number of used trucks plus cash for vacant land adjacent to its plant site. (The exchange has commercial substance.) Klamath intends to use the land for a parking lot. The trucks had a combined book value of \)35,000, as Klamath had recorded \(20,000 of accumulated depreciation against these assets. Klamath’s purchasing agent, who has had previous dealings in the secondhand market, indicated that the trucks had a fair value of \)46,000 at the time of the transaction. In addition to the trucks, Klamath Company paid $19,000 cash for the land.

Instructions

  1. Plant assets such as land, buildings, and equipment receive special accounting treatment. Describe the major characteristics of these assets that differentiate them from other types of assets.
  2. For each of the three transactions described above, determine the value at which Klamath Company should record the acquired assets. Support your calculations with an explanation of the underlying rationale.
  3. The books of Klamath Company show the following additional transactions for the fiscal year ended May 31, 2018.
    1. Acquisition of a building for speculative purposes.
    2. Purchase of a 2-year insurance policy covering plant equipment.
    3. Purchase of the rights for the exclusive use of a process used in the manufacture of ballet shoes.

For each of these transactions, indicate whether the asset should be classified as a plant asset. If it is a plant asset, explain why it is. If it is not a plant asset, explain why not, and identify the proper classification.

Short Answer

Expert verified
  1. Tangible assets have a physical existence, whereas intangible assets do not.
  2. Transactions:

1. Asset cost: $23,115

2. Cost paid to finance acquisition: $8,000

3. Cost of land $65,000

3. In the books of the Klamath Company

1. The building is not treated like a plant used for speculative purpose

2. Plant as it has no physical existence and sustainability.

3. The rights should be classified as intangible assets.

Step by step solution

01

Meaning of Acquisition of Cost

In accounting terms, acquisition cost alludes to acquiring a particular thing. There are three common trade contexts when it is utilized: mergers and acquisitions, fixed resources, and client acquisition.

02

(a) Explaining major characteristics of plant assets

The primary qualities that distinguish plant assets from other types of assets are listed below:

  1. It is not for resale that plant assets are acquired. They are used in the regular operations of a business.
  2. It is essential to distinguish tangible assets such as patents and goodwill from intangible assets such as property, plants, and equipment.Plant, machinery, and equipment are not physically part of the product for sale, as opposed to other assets that have physical substance (like raw materials).
  3. In most cases, durable long-term assets are liable to depreciation.
03

(Transaction 1) Determining the value at which Klamath Company should record the acquired assets

Assets bought under deferred payment contracts should be valued at the present value of the consideration exchanged between the contracting parties at the consideration date to represent cost accurately. Interest must be credited at a rate that approximates the rate agreed in an arms-length transaction where no interest rate is indicated. In addition, any expenditures associated with preparing the asset for its intended use are called asset costs.

Working notes:

Calculation of asset cost

Assetcos=Presentvalueofthenote+Freight+Installation=$28,0004×3.17+$425+$500=$22,190+925=$23,115

04

(Transaction 2) Determining the value at which Klamath Company should record the acquired assets

The entire cost of a lump-sum acquisition of a collection of assets should be allocated among the individual assets based on their respective fair valuations. The $8,000 in interest costs paid to finance the acquisition is a period cost and is not included in the asset cost calculation.

Assets

Calculation

Amount

Inventory

$220,000×$50,000$250,000

$ 44,000

Land

$220,000×$80,000$250,000

$ 70,400

Building

$220,000 x ($120,000/$250,000)

$105,600

05

(Transaction 3) Determining the value at which Klamath Company should record the acquired assets

The asset’s fair value and any cash paid should be recorded as the cost of a nonmonetary item acquired in a commercially significant transaction. In addition, any profit made on the trade is recorded.

The fair value of trucks

$46,000

Cash paid

19,000

Cost of land

$65,000

06

(c1) Explaining the acquisition situation of a building for speculative purposes

As it is not used in routine operations, a structure acquired for speculative reasons is not a plant asset. The structure would be better described as an investment.

07

(c2) Explaining the purchase of a 2-year insurance policy covering plant equipment

Since it has no physical substance and is not durable, the two-year insurance policy covering plant equipment is not a plant asset. This insurance should be classed as a current asset (for the portion used within the next 12 months) and another asset (for the amount used over the following 12 months).

08

(c3) Explaining the purchase of the rights for the exclusive use of a process used to manufacture ballet shoes

The exclusive right to use the process used in the manufacture of ballet shoes is not a property because they have no physical substance. Intangible assets are those that should be treated as rights.

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Most popular questions from this chapter

(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.

Date of Payment

Amount of Payment

March 1

\)240,000

May 1

330,000

July 1

60,000

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%.

Instructions

Compute the balance in each of the following accounts at December 31, 2017, and December 31, 2018. (Round amounts to the nearest dollar.)

  1. Land.
  2. Buildings.
  3. Interest Expense.

Question: Schwartzkopf Co. purchased for \(2,200,000 property that included both land and a building to be used in operations. The seller’s book value was \)300,000 for the land and \(900,000 for the building. By appraisal, the fair value was estimated to be \)500,000 for the land and $2,000,000 for the building. At what amount should Schwartzkopf report the land and the building at the end of the year?.

(Purchase of Computer with Zero-Interest-Bearing Debt) Cardinals Corporation purchased a computer on December 31, 2016, for \(105,000, paying \)30,000 down and agreeing to pay the balance in five equal installments of $15,000 payable each December 31 beginning in 2017. An assumed interest rate of 10% is implicit in the purchase price.

Instructions

(Round to two decimal places.)

  1. Prepare the journal entry(ies) at the date of purchase.
  2. Prepare the journal entry(ies) at December 31, 2017, to record the payment and interest (effective-interest method employed).
  3. Prepare the journal entry(ies) at December 31, 2018, to record the payment and interest (effective-interest method employed).

(Nonmonetary Exchange) Dana Ashbrook Inc. has negotiated the purchase of a new piece of automatic equipment at a price of \(8,000 plus trade-in, f.o.b. factory. Dana Ashbrook Inc. paid \)8,000 cash and traded in used equipment. The used equipment had originally cost \(62,000; it had a book value of \)42,000 and a secondhand fair value of \(47,800, as indicated by recent transactions involving similar equipment. Freight and installation charges for the new equipment required a cash payment of \)1,100.

Instructions

  1. Prepare the general journal entry to record this transaction, assuming that the exchange has commercial substance.
  2. Assuming the same facts as in (a) except that fair value information for the assets exchanged is not determinable, prepare the general journal entry to record this transaction.

(Classification of Acquisition Costs) Selected accounts included in the property, plant, and equipment section of Lobo Corporation’s balance sheet at December 31, 2016, had the following balances.

Land

\( 300,000

Land improvements

140,000

Buildings

1,100,000

Equipment

960,000

During 2017, the following transactions occurred.

  1. A tract of land was acquired for \)150,000 as a potential future building site.
  2. A plant facility consisting of land and building was acquired from Mendota Company in exchange for 20,000 shares of Lobo’s common stock. On the acquisition date, Lobo’s stock had a closing market price of \(37 per share on a national stock exchange. The plant facility was carried on Mendota’s books at \)110,000 for land and \(320,000 for the building at the exchange date. Current appraised values for the land and building, respectively, are \)230,000 and \(690,000.
  3. Items of machinery and equipment were purchased at a total cost of \)400,000. Additional costs were incurred as follows.

Freight and unloading

\(13,000

Sales taxes

20,000

Installation

26,000

  1. Expenditures totaling \)95,000 were made for new parking lots, streets, and sidewalks at the corporation’s various plant locations. These expenditures had an estimated useful life of 15 years.
  2. A machine costing \(80,000 on January 1, 2009, was scrapped on June 30, 2017. Double-declining-balance depreciation has been recorded on the basis of a 10-year life.
  3. A machine was sold for \)20,000 on July 1, 2017. Original cost of the machine was \(44,000 on January 1, 2014, and it was depreciated on the straight-line basis over an estimated useful life of 7 years and a salvage value of \)2,000.

Instructions

(Round to the nearest dollar.)

a. Prepare a detailed analysis of the changes in each of the following balance sheet accounts for 2017.

Land Buildings

Land Improvements Equipment

(Hint: Disregard the related accumulated depreciation accounts.)

b. List the items in the fact situation that were not used to determine the answer to (a), showing the pertinent amounts and supporting computations in good form for each item. In addition, indicate where, or if, these items should be included in Lobo’s financial statements.

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