Sandhya and Suman were partners in a firm sharing profits and losses in the ratio of 3 : 5. They decided to dissolve the firm on 31st March, 2024. On the date of dissolution, the Balance Sheet of the firm showed a balance of 80,000 in sundry debtors and a balance of 5,000 in provision for bad debts account. How much amount will be transferred to Realisation Account to close Sundry Debtors Account?
Step 1: Sundry Debtors appear on the asset side of the Balance Sheet at 80,000.
Step 2: Provision for Bad Debts of 5,000 appears on the liabilities side (or as a deduction from Sundry Debtors).
Step 3: On dissolution, the full gross amount of debtors is transferred to the Realisation Account.
Note: Provision for Bad Debts is not netted off while transferring assets. It is closed by crediting the Realisation A/c separately.
Step 4: Therefore, Sundry Debtors to Realisation A/c = 80,000
Provision for Bad Debts A/c will be transferred to the credit side of Realisation A/c separately.
Realisation A/c Dr. & 80,000
To Sundry Debtors A/c & 80,000
Provision for Bad Debts A/c Dr. & 5,000
To Realisation A/c & 5,000
Which of the following will not result in compulsory dissolution of a partnership firm?
Dev, Bhudev and Shamdev were partners in a firm sharing profits equally. On 31st March, 2024, their firm was dissolved. On this date the bank account showed a credit balance of 10,000 and there was a debit balance of 15,000 in the cash account. All payments were settled by cheque. Ravi, a creditor of 2,000 was not having any bank account, therefore he was paid in cash. Afterwards the cash account was closed by depositing the balance of cash into the bank. The journal entry for closing cash account will be:
Find the interval in which $f(x) = x + \frac{1}{x}$ is always increasing, $x \neq 0$.