1answer.
Ask question
Login Signup
Ask question
All categories
  • English
  • Mathematics
  • Social Studies
  • Business
  • History
  • Health
  • Geography
  • Biology
  • Physics
  • Chemistry
  • Computers and Technology
  • Arts
  • World Languages
  • Spanish
  • French
  • German
  • Advanced Placement (AP)
  • SAT
  • Medicine
  • Law
  • Engineering
Finger [1]
3 years ago
12

Lemon Corporation generated $324,600 of income from ordinary business operations. It also sold several assets during the year. C

ompute Lemon’s taxable income under each of the following alternative assumptions about the tax consequences of the asset sales.
a. Lemon recognized a $5,500 capital gain and a $7,400 net Section 1231 loss.
b. Lemon recognized a $6,500 capital loss and a $4,700 net Section 1231 gain.
c. Lemon recognized a $2,500 capital gain, a $3,900 capital loss, and a $3,000 net Section 1231 gain.
d.Lemon recognized $4,000 of depreciation recapture, a $2,000 Section 1231 gain, and a $4,200 Section 1231 loss.
Business
1 answer:
slega [8]3 years ago
4 0

Answer:

a. Lemon’s taxable income = $322,700

b. Lemon’s taxable income = $324,600

c. Lemon’s taxable income = $326,200

d. Lemon’s taxable income = $326,400

Explanation:

Before the questions are answered, the provisions of section 1231 of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) rules are quoted as follows:

- If you have a net section 1231 loss, it is an ordinary loss.

- If you have a net section 1231 gain, it is ordinary income up to the amount of your unrecaptured section 1231 losses from previous years. The rest, if any, is a long-term capital gain.

Therefore, net section 1231 loss which is an ordinary loss is deducted from ordinary business operations to obtain taxable income.

Also, we describe the following:

Taxable income can be described as the amount of income that is employed to calculated the amount of tax that is payable to the government by an individual or a company in a particular tax year. It is obtained after making all required additions and allowable deductions.

Capital gain can be described as an increase in the value of a capital asset which is realized when the asset is sold. For tax purposes, capital gain is added to the income from ordinary business operations to obtain taxable income.

Capital loss can be described as a decrease in the value of a capital asset which is recognised when the asset is sold. For tax purposes, capital loss is deducted from the income from ordinary business operations to obtain taxable income.

We therefore proceed as follows:

a. Lemon recognized a $5,500 capital gain and a $7,400 net Section 1231 loss.

From the question, we have the following:

Income from ordinary business operations = $324,600

Capital gain recognised = $5,500

Net Section 1231 loss recognised = $7,400

Based on the explanation provided above, Lemon’s taxable income under this scenario is therefore calculated as follows:

Lemon’s taxable income = Income from ordinary business operations + Capital gain recognised - Net Section 1231 loss recognised = $324,600 + $5,500 - $7,400 = $322,700

b. Lemon recognized a $6,500 capital loss and a $4,700 net Section 1231 gain.

From the question, there is nothing related past five years stated and it is therefore assumed that there is no net section 1231 loss in the past five years.

As result, the total of $4,700 net Section 1231 gain is regarded as a capital gain and it is set-off against the $6,500 capital loss as follows to obtain the non-deductible expense as follows:

Non-deductible expense = $6,500 - $4,700 = $1,800

Since there is nothing deductible again, Lemon’s taxable income under this scenario is therefore equal to the income from ordinary business operations of $324,600. That is,

Lemon’s taxable income = $324,600

c. Lemon recognized a $2,500 capital gain, a $3,900 capital loss, and a $3,000 net Section 1231 gain.

Since no net section 1231 loss in the past five years is indicated here, the $3,000 net Section 1231 gain will be treated as a long-term capital gain.

Based on the provisions of section 1231 of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) rules quoted above, non-deductible expense is calculated by deducting the $3,900 capital loss to the extent of the $2,500 capital gain as follows:

Non-deductible expense = $3,900 - $2,500 = $1,400

Since the $3,000 net Section 1231 gain has to be treated as a long-term capital gain, the $1,400 will be deducted from it obtain the net capital gain as follows:

Net capital gain = $3000 - $1400 = $1600

Lemon’s taxable income under this scenario is therefore calculated by adding the $1,600 net capital gain to the $324,600 income from ordinary business operations as follows:

Lemon’s taxable income = $324,600 + $1600 = $326,200

d. Lemon recognized $4,000 of depreciation recapture, a $2,000 Section 1231 gain, and a $4,200 Section 1231 loss.

We have the following:

Section 1231 loss = $4,200

Section 1231 gain = $2,000

Therefore, we have:

Net section 1231 loss = Section 1231 loss - Section 1231 gain = $4,200 - 2,000 = $2,200

This net section 1231 loss of $2,200 is therefore treated as ordinary loss as already stated in the provisions of section 1231 of the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) rules quoted above and deducted from the $324,600 income from ordinary business operations.

In addition, the depreciation recapture of $4,000 will be treated as ordinary income and it will be added to the $324,600 income from ordinary business operations.

Lemon’s taxable income under this scenario is therefore calculated as follows:

Lemon’s taxable income = Income from ordinary business operations + Depreciation recapture - Net section 1231 loss = $324,600 + $4,000 - $2,200 = $326,400

You might be interested in
A company reported beginning inventory of 100 units at a per unit cost of $25. It had the following purchase and sales transacti
patriot [66]

Answer:

14-Jan

Dr Trade Receivable $1,125

Cr Sales

14-jan

Dr Cost of sales 625

Cr Inventory 625

9-Apr

Dr Inventory 375

Cr Trade Payable 375

2-Sep

Dr Trade Receivable $2,500

Cr Sales $2,500

2 sep

Dr Cost of sales $1,375

Cr Inventory $1,375

Dec 31 No journal entry

Explanation:

Preparation to Records the month-end journal entries noted below, assuming the company uses a periodic inventory system

14-Jan

Dr Trade Receivable $1,125

Cr Sales (45*25)

14-jan

Dr Cost of sales[25*25] 625

Cr Inventory 625

9-Apr

Dr Inventory (25*$15) 375

Cr Trade Payable 375

2-Sep

Dr Trade Receivable $2,500

Cr Sales (50*50) $2,500

2 Sep

Dr Cost of sales $1,375

Cr Inventory $1,375

($2,500-$1,125)

Dec 31 No journal entry

8 0
3 years ago
A summary of the time tickets for the current month follows:
iVinArrow [24]

Answer:

Entry is given below

Explanation:

Entry for factory labor cost

DATE          ACCOUNT                         DEBIT        CREDIT

DEC 31     Work in Progress(w)          $97,780

                Factory overhead              $6,340

                 Wages payable                                     $104,120

Working

Work in progress =  3,860+4,300+24,500+18,600+7120+7400+32,000

Work in progress = 97,780

NOTE: Work in progress is sum of all direct labor cost

Factory Overhead = all indirect labor cost which is only $6,130

7 0
3 years ago
How do my educational choices connect with my long-term goals and vision for life?
tangare [24]

Answer: They allow you to connect every choice you make to something larger (which ... RescueTime Goals help you stay committed to your long-term vision, stay ... Why it's so important to have long term goals for your career and personal life ... Creativity; Knowledge; Learning; Leadership; Recognition; Stability.

Explanation: -pls mark me as brainliest and thank me

7 0
3 years ago
P11-45. Statement of Cash Flows (Indirect Method). Artic Company’s income statement and comparative balance sheet follow. ARTIC
Wittaler [7]

Answer and Explanation:

a. The computation of change in cash during 2019 is shown below:-

Change in cash = Cash balance on 31 Dec 2019 - Cash balance on 31 Dec 2018

= $49,000 - $28,000

= $21,000

b. The Preparation of statement of cash flows using the indirect method of 2019 is shown below:-

                                       <u>Artic Company’s</u>

                                 <u>By using the direct method</u>

                                <u> For the year ended 2019</u>

<u>Particulars                                                                    Amount</u>

Cash flow from operating activities

Net income/loss                                                            ($42,000)

Adjustment to reconcile the net income

Depreciation expenses                     $22,000

Less: Gain on sales of land                ($25,000)

Changes in current assets and current liabilities

Decrease in accounts receivable       $8,000

($50,000 - $42,000)

Decrease in Inventory                          $6,000

($113,000 - $107,000)

Decrease in Prepaid advertising          $3,000

($13,000 - $10,000)

Increase in Interest payable                  $6,000

Less: Decrease in accounts payable    ($14,000)           $6,000

($31,000 - $17,000)

Net cash provided by operating activities                     ($36,000)

Cash flow from investing activities    

Cash received from sale of land               $70,000

Cash paid for equipment                            ($183,000)

($360,000 - ($222,000 - $45,000)

Cash flow provided by investing activities                       ($113,000)

Cash flow from financing activities

Cash received from issue of bonds payable $200,000

Cash payment for Treasury stock                   ($30,000)

Net cash provided by financing activities                        $170,000    

Net Increase (Decrease) in cash                                        $21,000

Cash baalance on 21 Dec 2018                                          $28,000

Cash balance on 31 Dec 2019                                             $49,000

5 0
3 years ago
Crane Company received proceeds of $799000 on 10-year, 9% bonds issued on January 1, 2019. The bonds had a face value of $848000
sergejj [24]

Answer:

The amount of interest expense Crane will show with relation to these bonds for the year ended December 31, 2020 is $81,220.

Explanation:

This can be calculated as follows:

Annual amortization = (Face value of the bonds - Proceeds from the bonds) / Tenure of the bonds = ($848000 - $799000) / 10 = $49,000 / 10 = $4,900

Interest expenses for 2020 = (Face value of the bonds * Annual interest rate) + Annual amortization = ($848000 * 9%) + $4,900 = $76,320 + $4,900 = $81,220

Therefore, the amount of interest expense Crane will show with relation to these bonds for the year ended December 31, 2020 is $81,220.

3 0
3 years ago
Other questions:
  • According to nutt and backoff, ____ is when the vision has enough imagery that it is powerful enough to communicate clearly a pi
    6·1 answer
  • In a contract, what is consideration? A. Exchanging things of value B. Breaching the contract C. A business tort D. The minimum
    12·2 answers
  • Suppose aggregate consumer spending equals $5,000 when aggregate disposable income is zero. Furthermore, suppose that when dispo
    13·1 answer
  • A bottleneck is an operation that has the lowest effective capacity of any operation in the process. True/False
    6·1 answer
  • Companies facing the challenge of setting prices for the first time can choose between two broad strategies: market-penetration
    14·1 answer
  • The new fund had average daily assets of $3.8 billion in the past year. The fund sold $416 million and purchased $516 million wo
    6·1 answer
  • Select the correct answer from each drop-down menu.
    11·1 answer
  • A company issues $25300000, 7.8%, 20-year bonds to yield 8.0% on January 1, Year 17. Interest is paid on June 30 and December 31
    10·1 answer
  • The ability to deter entry requires A. a credible threat that if entry occurs the firm is willing to produce more than they woul
    11·1 answer
  • 2. An entrepreneur must make sure to budget carefully since they oversee their own company's finances.
    5·1 answer
Add answer
Login
Not registered? Fast signup
Signup
Login Signup
Ask question!