1. Cash of $44,000 was received from donors, who stated that it could be used for any purpose desired by the museum. 2. A donor gave the museum $11,000, stipulating that the money be used only to acquire fine examples of marquetry. 3. Elias Gotbucks sent Mon Elisa a letter, stating that he would donate $16,500 to the museum to purchase examples of Sara Dawn's quilt work, provided the museum conducted a special campaign that raised at least $27,500 to buy additional examples. 4. The museum spent $4,400 to acquire fine marquetry. Mon Elisa capitalizes its marquetry collection. 5. Mon Elisa contacted wealthy patrons to raise funds to buy Sara Dawn's quilt work. It obtained $33,000 in pledges, all of which it expects to be collected. Mon Elisa then wrote to Elias Gotbucks, advising him it had raised $33,000. 6. Attorney Ted Floot donated his services to the museum. He spent 4 hours on museum legal matters and 3 hours as a salesperson in the museum shop. Mr. Floot bills $275 an hour when he works as an attorney. 7. During the year, Mon Elisa received several art works having a total fair value of $49,500. Mon Elisa does not capitalize its art collection, but it holds the art for public exhibition, protects and preserves the works, and uses the proceeds of any sales to acquire other works for its collection. 8. A wealthy patron donated The Portrait of Samantha, which had a fair value of $6,600, to the museum. The museum accepted the gift with the understanding that it would be sold at auction and the proceeds used for any purpose the museum wished. 9. Another wealthy patron entered into an irrevocable charitable remainder trust with Mon Elisa, whereby the patron's wife would receive annual distributions until her death. At that time, Mon Elisa would receive the remaining assets, to be used to augment Mon Elisa's art collection. The patron's bank will administer the trust. Mon Elisa's actuary estimated the fair value of the gift at $104,500. Note: Museum policy is to capitalize nonart collection acquisitions. Note: If no journal entry is necessary, select the no entry required - debit and no entry required - credit for the account names and record zero for the debit and credit amounts. Journal entries for Non Elisa Museum transactions To record the receipt of a cash unrestricted contribution 2 To record the receipt of a cash restricted contribution 3 Gotbucks conditional pledge is not recorded until the condition is met To record the capitalization of the nonart collection acquisition To reclass the restriction to an unrestricted net asset 5 To record a receivable for a donor's restricted contribution To record a receivable for Gotbucks conditional pledge 6 To record Ted Floot's donated service that required professional expertise 7 Policy is to not capitalize the art collection 8 To record donated art pending its sale 9 Check To record contribution with donor restrictions Debit Credit 0 0 0 0 ✓ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ✓ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
1. Cash of $44,000 was received from donors, who stated that it could be used for any purpose desired by the museum. 2. A donor gave the museum $11,000, stipulating that the money be used only to acquire fine examples of marquetry. 3. Elias Gotbucks sent Mon Elisa a letter, stating that he would donate $16,500 to the museum to purchase examples of Sara Dawn's quilt work, provided the museum conducted a special campaign that raised at least $27,500 to buy additional examples. 4. The museum spent $4,400 to acquire fine marquetry. Mon Elisa capitalizes its marquetry collection. 5. Mon Elisa contacted wealthy patrons to raise funds to buy Sara Dawn's quilt work. It obtained $33,000 in pledges, all of which it expects to be collected. Mon Elisa then wrote to Elias Gotbucks, advising him it had raised $33,000. 6. Attorney Ted Floot donated his services to the museum. He spent 4 hours on museum legal matters and 3 hours as a salesperson in the museum shop. Mr. Floot bills $275 an hour when he works as an attorney. 7. During the year, Mon Elisa received several art works having a total fair value of $49,500. Mon Elisa does not capitalize its art collection, but it holds the art for public exhibition, protects and preserves the works, and uses the proceeds of any sales to acquire other works for its collection. 8. A wealthy patron donated The Portrait of Samantha, which had a fair value of $6,600, to the museum. The museum accepted the gift with the understanding that it would be sold at auction and the proceeds used for any purpose the museum wished. 9. Another wealthy patron entered into an irrevocable charitable remainder trust with Mon Elisa, whereby the patron's wife would receive annual distributions until her death. At that time, Mon Elisa would receive the remaining assets, to be used to augment Mon Elisa's art collection. The patron's bank will administer the trust. Mon Elisa's actuary estimated the fair value of the gift at $104,500. Note: Museum policy is to capitalize nonart collection acquisitions. Note: If no journal entry is necessary, select the no entry required - debit and no entry required - credit for the account names and record zero for the debit and credit amounts. Journal entries for Non Elisa Museum transactions To record the receipt of a cash unrestricted contribution 2 To record the receipt of a cash restricted contribution 3 Gotbucks conditional pledge is not recorded until the condition is met To record the capitalization of the nonart collection acquisition To reclass the restriction to an unrestricted net asset 5 To record a receivable for a donor's restricted contribution To record a receivable for Gotbucks conditional pledge 6 To record Ted Floot's donated service that required professional expertise 7 Policy is to not capitalize the art collection 8 To record donated art pending its sale 9 Check To record contribution with donor restrictions Debit Credit 0 0 0 0 ✓ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ✓ 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
Chapter10: Deductions And Losses: Certain Itemized Deductions
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 35P: On December 27, 2019, Roberta purchased four tickets to a charity ball sponsored by the city of San...
Related questions
Question
Expert Solution
This question has been solved!
Explore an expertly crafted, step-by-step solution for a thorough understanding of key concepts.
Step by step
Solved in 2 steps with 2 images
Recommended textbooks for you
Individual Income Taxes
Accounting
ISBN:
9780357109731
Author:
Hoffman
Publisher:
CENGAGE LEARNING - CONSIGNMENT
Individual Income Taxes
Accounting
ISBN:
9780357109731
Author:
Hoffman
Publisher:
CENGAGE LEARNING - CONSIGNMENT