Prepare a corrected lead schedule for the property plant


You are engaged in the audit of the financial statements of Hartz Corporation for the year ended December 31, 2010. The chief accountant of the client has prepared the accompanying analyses of the Property, Plant, and Equipment and related accumulated depreciation accounts. You have traced the beginning balances to your prior year's audit working papers without exception.

HARTZ CORPORATION

Analysis of Property, Plant, and Equipment and Related Accumulated Depreciation Accounts Year Ended December 31, 2010
Description
Land
Buildings
Machinery &
Equipment Description
Buildings
Machinery &
Equipment Final
12/31/2009 Assets
Additions
Retirements $ 430,500
140,000 $ 365,000
$ 935,500 194,000
$ 228,200 Final
12/31/2009 Accumulated Depreciation
Additions*
Retirements $ 70,000 $ 6,450 $ 173,250
$ 243,250 43,880
$ 50,330 $ 11,200
23,000 $ $ 33,300
33,300 32,250
32,250 Final
12/31/2010
$ 441,700
163,000
525,700
$ 1,130,400 Final
12/31/2010
$ 76,450
184,880
$ 261,330 * Depreciation Expense for the year

Hartz Corporation depreciates all plant assets using the straight-line basis (no estimated residual value exists).

Estimated service lives are 25 years for the building and 10 years for other items. The company's policy is to depreciate on a monthly basis in the years of acquisition and disposal. Your audit revealed the following information regarding errors discovered during the audit:

1. On February 1, the company entered in to an eight-year lease contract for a die-casting machine, with annual rental payments of $7,500, payable in advance every February 1. The lease is cancelable by either party and there is no option to renew the lease or buy the equipment at the end of the lease. The estimated service life of the machine is 8 years with no residual value. The company recorded this transaction as a capital lease recording the lease obligation and the asset at $60,000, the present value at the date of the lease. It also recorded the applicable depreciation expense for the year on the machine.

2. The company had a new roof installed on one of its buildings (which it originally purchased on June 30, 1995). The new roof did not extend the life of the building. Completion of the work occurred on June 30, 2010 at a cost of $20,000. The old roof cost $15,000 with a book value of $7,500 at the time the new roof was completed. The company made all of the correct journal entries to record the disposition of the old asset and capitalization of the new asset but it calculated depreciation for the new roof with a useful life of 25 years.

Note: Depreciation expense for the rest of the building was properly recorded.

3. During May 2010, Hartz Corporation was assessed $6,000 by the city for sewer repairs. Following the sewer repairs, the company decided to repave the parking lot and complete a landscaping project (the nature of which constitutes an indefinite life). On August 31, 2010, the company paid $3,800 ($3,000 for paving and $800 for landscaping). The chief accountant charged all expenditures to the Land account.

4. Hartz Corporation sold a machine on October 1, 2010 for $28,000 cash. The company purchased the machine on April 1, 2006 for $50,000. The chief accountant recorded depreciation expense of $5,000 on this machine in 2010. All other depreciation expense journal entries were recorded correctly in previous years.

5. Harbor City donated land and a building appraised at $150,000 and $300,000, respectively, to Hartz Corporation on October 1. Since no costs were involved, the chief accountant made no entry for the above transaction. Required:

1) Prepare the correcting journal entries that you would propose at December 31, 2010, for each of the five errors above.

2) Prepare a corrected lead schedule for the Property, Plant, and Equipment and related accumulated depreciation accounts.

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Accounting Basics: Prepare a corrected lead schedule for the property plant
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