Accounting theory and practice, Volume 2 (of 3) : a textbook for colleges and…
Chapter XX, in the discussion of the liability, bonds.
3573 words | Chapter 112
_Deferred Expenses._ These expenses have been explained in detail
in Chapter XIV. Here it is to be noted that, while this group of
adjustment items is always an asset, for the proper determination of
deferred interest an examination of the liability, notes payable, is
often necessary. Notes payable given for a loan at the bank, or given
to a creditor, with prepaid interest added to the principal of the
debt as a part of the face amount of the note, will give the data for
calculation of the amount of interest or discount to be deferred to
later periods.
Contingent Liabilities
As stated above, the second group of items under the head of inventory
of the liabilities is that of contingent liabilities. It is taken for
granted that all items which on the date of the balance sheet have
assumed a status of full and direct liability will, of course, appear
as such on the books. Here, all that can be said without trespassing on
the distinctive field of auditing, is that all such items must appear.
For the method of detecting their omission, whether omitted with
fraudulent intent or through carelessness and inaccuracy, the student
is referred to a standard work on auditing.
We have here to consider, however, a group of items the status of
which is one of suspended or indeterminate liability. Expressed
otherwise, they are items concerning which it is hoped—it may be even
expected—that the business will never incur liability but for which in
the event of certain happenings liability must be assumed. There are,
of course, degrees of contingency, ranging from almost certainty to
negligible remoteness. It would seem that no business man would omit
the almost certain type from his books, and in case of doubt prudence
demands that decision be rendered in favor of at least the greater
probability.
Yet there is often seen a failure to book even the liability on account
of goods purchased and shipped, but not received. If it is argued that
the liability is not fully established until receipt and acceptance of
the goods, every manager knows that non-acceptance of purchases is the
exception, not the rule. On the other hand, upon receipt of consigned
goods to be sold on account of a principal, no liability except to
exercise ordinary care usually attaches to a broker until some part
of the goods has been sold by him. Between these two extremes are
many shades and degrees of probability, all of which in some cases
are recorded as liabilities; in others none are so recorded. The
importance of the information as to contingent liability on account of
notes receivable discounted and discounted acceptances is now accorded
general recognition. As to liability under court judgments awaiting
appeal, guarantees of work and product, deposits made on contracts or
bids—these and other similar matters will be treated fully in following
pages.
These, then, constitute the main problems in connection with
liabilities on the balance sheet. The group of current liabilities will
now be considered, followed by a discussion of the nature of contingent
liabilities.
CURRENT LIABILITIES
Notes and accounts payable, using the terms broadly, constitute
practically all of the current liabilities. Not all notes nor all
accounts payable are, however, current items. The term “current” cannot
be standardized; it varies and will perhaps always vary according to
customs and practices in any particular trade. In the main, the 90-day
period may be taken as the average. That is, on the given date of the
balance sheet a knowledge of the debts that must be met within the
next 90 days is a minimum of necessary information for the purpose of
judging business condition, particularly so far as concerns the credit
extended to it. When a balance sheet is submitted to the bank as the
basis for credit, other data concerning notes payable are usually
called for—such as notes given for merchandise, notes negotiated to own
banks, notes otherwise disposed of. The Federal Reserve Bulletin for
April, 1917, under the title “Uniform Accounting a Tentative Proposal”
suggests for balance sheet presentation a list of notes analyzed as to
acceptances made for merchandise or raw material purchased; notes given
for merchandise or raw material purchased; notes given to banks for
money borrowed; notes sold through brokers; notes given for machinery,
additions to plant, etc.; notes due to stockholders, officers, or
employees. R. H. Montgomery[49] suggests a division of notes into the
groups: notes issued for merchandise; notes discounted by own banks;
notes sold through brokers; and demand loans. He suggests further that
an additional separation into notes accompanied by collateral and notes
with which no collateral is given would be desirable.
[49] In “Auditing—Theory and Practice.”
From the above it is seen that the present tendency of bankers is
to insist on a full statement of essential facts needed to pass
intelligent judgment as to the exact status of affairs. Even in the
case of balance sheets, the accuracy of which has been certified by
someone, some bankers require a certificate as to the character of the
certifier unless he is well known. More and more is the fact being
recognized that legitimate business has nothing to fear and much to
gain by making a full and free statement of exact condition, and that
the sooner business supported by fraudulent statement is eliminated,
the better will it be for legitimate enterprises. In certain cases,
however, the interests or purpose of a business would not be well
served by the detailed information demanded by the banker and, here
as elsewhere, no specific rule can be laid down other than that the
purpose should in all cases govern the form and particularly the amount
of detail.
Loans from Bank
In connection with advances from the bank it should be noted that
the banker does not expect to become a permanent partner in the
business, but that one of his legitimate functions is to furnish funds
for seasonal fluctuations. Oftentimes a concern does not start with
enough capital to carry its load of maximum trade, from the fear that
advantageous investment of surplus funds during the dull season will
not be possible. It may rightly expect its bank to furnish funds for
this purpose when expenses are heaviest, and to await repayment of the
loan out of the income, as accounts are collected after the peak of
the seasonal trade is passed. This is one of the fields of legitimate
banking and the banker has a right to whatever information is necessary
to assure himself that his aid is being put to proper use.
General Classification of Notes
For general purposes, a separation of notes into notes for trade
purposes and notes for other purposes is desirable. Trade purposes
would be limited to merchandise purchases and loans for working
capital. Other purposes would be long-time loans, purchase money notes
often secured by mortgage on equipment, and notes of officers and
employees. These last would best be classified by their showing as
fixed rather than current liabilities.
Accounts Payable
The use of the term, accounts payable, to cover only creditors
for stock-in-trade and other trade purposes is too indefinite and
inaccurate, the term being too comprehensive and inclusive. The
considerations applying to trade debtors have equal weight in requiring
the use of the term trade creditors for the purposes mentioned above.
Accounts payable to trade creditors are usually the current items,
whereas those payable to stockholders, officers, etc., and those due to
a parent or holding company are more or less fixed, as there is usually
no particular urgency as to the time of their payment. An analysis
of trade creditors into “not due” and “past due” will at least bring
out the information as to neglected discounts and some idea as to the
amount of cash needed to pay off debts and to secure their discount.
There is no necessary relationship between accounts and notes payable,
nor any significance in their relative amounts. In some trades notes
are given in order to obtain the discounts; in others notes are given
at the date of purchase of the commodities.
_Deposits._ Another group of accounts payable of a more or less current
type consists of deposits of various sorts. The business may accept
deposits from customers or employees for various purposes. Consumers’
deposits with gas and electric light companies as guarantee to cover
payment of bills and possible damage to meters or other company
property; deposits covering locker privileges, breakage of materials,
keys issued, and the like, are examples of this kind. These deposits
are seldom all claimed at any one time; experience only can indicate
the necessary financial provisions to be made currently for them. In
some instances there is an accruing liability on account of interest on
these deposits which must also be cared for.
_Guarantees._ Sometimes goods are purchased and only partly paid for, a
portion of the purchase price being retained as a guarantee of quality
until opportunity is given for adequate examination and acceptance
or rejection. Similarly, in the case of construction work done by
contract or subcontract, the owner—or, if a subcontract, the general
contractor—retains a certain percentage of the contract price as a
guarantee of performance of the whole according to contract agreement.
This liability for the portion retained is a current liability, as a
usual thing, and is to be listed under accounts payable with suitable
subtitle.
_Long-Term Notes._ Long-term notes and accounts, bonds, and other fixed
liabilities become current as their maturity closely approaches and
provision for payment must be made.
_Future Deliveries._ On the border lines between contingent and full
liabilities may be classed the liability because of goods purchased
with long future dating. This is sometimes allowed by a seller to
secure warehouse room for new product. It is undoubtedly best to set
up both the asset and the liability, even where the goods have not yet
been received.
_Consigned Goods Sold._ The factor’s real liability on account
of consigned goods sold should, of course, be shown as a current
liability, offset by any claims for expenses incurred on account of the
consignor and any accrued commissions earned on sales to date.
_Dividends Not Yet Paid._ Another item belonging to accounts payable
is dividends declared but not yet paid. Though it may be the custom of
a company always to declare a dividend on a given date, no liability
is incurred on account of dividends until they are actually declared.
Upon declaration of a dividend the company makes itself liable to
stockholders for the amount of the dividend. This liability ranks
as an unsecured debt on the same footing as unsecured liabilities
to other creditors. The dividend liability in large part is usually
soon liquidated. Any unclaimed dividends constitute a liability until
claimed or authority is given for other disposition. The item is
usually small and is best shown as a current liability even though the
chance of its being claimed may be remote. The method of handling and
safeguarding the dividend transaction is treated in Chapter XXIV.
Accrued Expenses
The final item to be considered among the current liabilities is the
group of accrued expenses. These constitute such items as wages,
salaries, rents, royalties, expense supplies purchased but unpaid for,
interest, advertising, sales commissions, traveling expenses, freights,
water and other taxes, etc.—in fact, all services which have been
rendered the business previous to the date of the balance sheet but
which on that date are unpaid. These usually comprise the most urgent
of the liability items and so are properly classed as current. There
is seldom any business in which items of this kind are not encountered
and, as stated on page 343, a careful examination of the records and
familiarity with the business is needed to secure a full statement of
them.
With regard to some of these items, difference of opinion exists.
It is argued that until the amount of the liability is known, no
real liability can be said to exist. Thus, taxes for the current
year may not be known until the following year. Proverbially taxes
are as certain as death, and there would seem to be no unreality or
contingency about their incidence. As the current year passes by, the
accounts should include a charge for taxes. Since the real amount is
not known, it must be carefully estimated; for any difference must be
taken up when the real amount becomes known, and so may disturb and
somewhat invalidate the results for comparative purposes. Because of
the fact that the current amount is an estimate, the title given the
liability thereunder is sometimes called “Reserve for Taxes” rather
than “Accrued Taxes.” No matter what the caption may be, it should
usually be listed as a current liability.
Booking of Accrued Expenses
As in the case of deferred expenses, so in the booking of accrued
expenses, in some quarters it is thought highly unscientific to record
both the expense and liability elements in the same account at the time
of adjusting the books. Use is made of a separate liability account
entitled “Interest Accrued,” for example. When so used immediately at
the opening of the new period, this account is either transferred to
the expense account where it will act as an offsetting credit to the
expense when paid, so automatically reducing the amount to the part
properly applicable to the new period; or the account may be allowed to
stand untouched (and therefore having no real significance) till the
end of the next period when only the difference between it and the new
amount accrued is made the basis of the new adjusting entry. Both these
methods, while securing a more evident separation of the expense and
liability elements, do so only at the cost of a needless multiplication
of accounts and work. To one acquainted with the significance of
bookkeeping methods, the old way of treating the liability element as
an inventory in the expense account makes a definite allocation of the
two elements, and does so with less burden on the bookkeeper and is to
be preferred in most cases.
Deferred Credits
Deferred credits, as already explained, are analogous to current
liabilities in that they represent unearned income. The enjoyment or
earning of this income requires the rendering of certain services which
are a claim on the current assets. In this sense, then, they belong
to the current liability group, for the payment of which the current
assets must be available.
NATURE OF CONTINGENT LIABILITIES
Statement of Contingent Liabilities
As stated on page 345, contingent liabilities range from those almost
certain to materialize to those extremely remote. For some purposes a
full statement of all such liabilities is needed to give an adequate
view of conditions within the business. For other purposes, so detailed
a statement may not be necessary although usually desirable. The
Federal Reserve Board requires on a balance sheet submitted as the
basis for credit a full statement of contingent liability as follows:
Kind of Contingent Liability Amount
Upon customers’ notes discounted, sold,
or otherwise transferred $......
Upon drafts negotiated ......
For accommodation indorsements ......
For guarantees ......
Upon leases ......
Upon bonds or other obligations of ......
subsidiary companies ......
Under contracts or purchase arrangements ......
Under agreements ......
Under pending lawsuits ......
This company is not a guarantor or indorser
of any liabilities or obligations of any
individual, firm, or corporation, and it is
not liable under any contracts, bonds, or
profit-sharing arrangements, or any other
agreements, and there are no lawsuits pending
except as set forth above.
Sign Company’s name here ..........................
By ..........................
N. B. It is most essential that each question be fully answered.
Full answers to the above inquisition would often prove embarrassing
but very enlightening. Two additional kinds of contingent liability not
listed above sometimes exist, viz.: that arising out of a call for the
unpaid portion of stocks owned but not fully paid for; and in the case
of a corporation, unpaid accumulated dividends on preferred stocks.
Some of these contingent liabilities require detailed consideration.
Notes and Drafts Transferred
The proper method of handling notes discounted, sold, or otherwise
transferred, and negotiated drafts is given in Volume I and will not
be repeated here. The showing of these items on the balance sheet is
by inclusion among both the assets and liabilities, or preferably by
inclusion among the assets with the liability element shown deducted.
When a person or firm lends its credit by means of an accommodation
indorsement, the transaction should be recorded as a charge to the
accommodated party and a credit to Notes Payable if the liability
is primary; or to Indorser’s Liability, if secondary. In case of
primary liability, liability is full and must be listed on the balance
sheet as a note payable. In case of secondary liability, liability
is contingent, as in the case of discounted notes, and should be so
shown on the balance sheet. In either of these cases, the practice of
cancelling the liability against the corresponding asset and by a feat
of mental dexterity persuading oneself that there is therefore no need
to show the item on the balance sheet, is a practice to be universally
condemned.
Guarantees as a Contingent Liability
Guarantees are of many sorts—guarantees of product sold or work
performed, guarantees of the good faith of others in meeting their
obligations, etc. The transferred note is one kind of guarantee.
Oftentimes, a parent company may guarantee the principal and interest
or the interest only of the bond or note obligations of a subsidiary.
While the expectation is usually that the contingent liability will
not become real, yet experience shows the need of making adequate
provision against it. The recent example of the Denver & Rio Grande as
guarantor of the bond interest of Western Pacific bonds drives home
that necessity. In a case of this sort provision is best made in the
creation of a contingency reserve, for there is no experience on which
to base a better estimate. In the case of a policy of guaranteeing the
quality of a product or its workmanship, after a few years’ experience
very accurate estimates can be made of the loss to be expected
therefrom, and at the end of a fiscal period the books can be adjusted
on that basis just as they are for taxes. A charge to a suitable
expense account and a credit to a reserve or accrued account comprises
the book entry, with a listing of the reserve as a real liability.
Long-Term Leases
Contingent liability brought about by a lease covering a long period
may be disregarded if the lease has a marketable value sufficient to
cover the liability. Otherwise a contingent reserve should be set up.
Liability under the subletting of a lease is best handled by means of a
reserve.
Purchases for Future Delivery
Purchase contracts for future delivery, if made at a fixed price, may
be disregarded unless at the date of the balance sheet market value is
lower than cost, when a reserve should be set up. A fuller statement of
the facts shows the transaction among both assets and liabilities. If
the contract, being speculative, is not at a named price, the showing
of the reserve is prudent and conservative.
Pending Lawsuits
In the case of pending lawsuits, the contingent reserve is usually all
that is necessary. If the case is on appeal, it might in addition be
wise to create a fund which would provide funds for settlement if the
decision is unfavorable. Here the item of costs, fees, and accruing
interest is usually large and liberal provision must be made.
Stock not fully Paid
Where shares of stock are held which are not fully paid, a liability
attaches for the unpaid portion contingent upon call being made for it.
Showing the stocks at subscribed price with the offsetting liability
for the unpaid amount as a deduction, is perhaps the best method,
though there is no serious objection to omit mention of it if the stock
has increased in value, or of using the method of a reserve. Where a
double liability attaches to stock ownership in case of bankruptcy,
no notice need be taken of the contingent liability so long as the
business whose stock is held shows an entirely solvent condition. When
such is not the case, whatever provision seems necessary should be
made, even to the extent of liability to the full value of the stock
held.
Accumulated Dividends on Preferred Stock
There is no liability on account of accumulated dividends on preferred
stock until profits have been made out of which they may be paid.
If the policy of management does not allow their declaration at
the present time, although sufficient profits have been made, the
accumulation of dividends should be shown as a liability. Where the
company is unable to declare dividends because of insufficient profits,
mention of the accumulating dividends should be made in a footnote as a
possible future liability.
Signature to Surety Bond
The liability arising through signature to a surety bond is a
contingent liability resting upon the good faith and honor of the
bonded party. The practice of personal bondsmen is not so prevalent
as formerly. Experience shows that the liability of the bondsmen may
become very real, and not only should suitable provision be made for it
but its existence should be shown on the balance sheet.
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