the best cabins available and may avail themselves of any and all of the ship’s recreation…
Case 11-6 deals with Lessee Ltd., a company that operates in Britain and uses IFRS. The question in this case is how to classify a lease that Lessee, Ltd. acquired from Lessor Inc. The accounting standard that deals with leases under IFRS is IAS 17. IAS 17 was originally issued in September 1982 and was reissued in December 2003. It classifies leases as either finance leases or operating leases. Finance leases make it so that the lessee recognizes an asset and a liability and the lessor recognizes a receivable, basically transferring all the risks and benefits of ownership. Under operating leases, the lessor still recognizes the asset and the lessee recognizes an expense.…
We have been requested to review and present to you our recommendations for the start of your new Pharmaceutical/Biotech Consulting Company. To begin, we would like to review the information that we have been given from you to KMCE&A. We understand that you have a background as a business executive as well as a scientific background. Your business plan states you are starting up a consulting company that will handle R&D monitoring for other companies that are in the Pharmaceutical/Biotech Industry. Your client base is mostly in the New Jersey and Pennsylvania area but hope to eventually expand to a global customer base. Your main investments will be in salaries in that as a services industry you will have minimal asset investments. Your personal preference is to have no personal liability. You would like to keep the ownership small and retain the majority ownership of 50% to 60% so that you can keep control of the decision making. However you are open to issuing stock if the funding of your business would benefit from this over financing through debt. You also expect to have a loss of approximately $25,000 in the first year due to start up costs and become profitable by year two. You initially will have three employees joining you at the start of the business. Two employees, Scott & Kate, will be contributing services of an IT specialist and a marketing/public relations as well as a program manager. The third member, Todd, who is an attorney, will not only contribute legal services but also an initial investment of $50,000. We also understand that you have $200,000 of personal funds to invest as well as have obtained an additional $500,000 in financing through securing your own personal assets.…
Lester Cooper and Julie Smith were engaged, Lester gave various gifts to both Julie & Janet Smith while living in Janet’s house. Later they had a disagreement causing the engagement to break off and Cooper desired his gifts given back. Julie gave back only the engagement ring. Cooper subsequently sued the Smith’s.…
On Sunday, February 5, 2016, Claimant Whitney stated that she was at home with her husband, as they were getting ready to go to church early that morning. She said she and her husband, Mr. Thomas Whitney had just departed from the front door of the residence and were walking towards her car parked in the front driveway when she “suddenly lost weakness in her left leg.” She said she felt weakness in her left thigh down to her left ankle, and she “felt a numbing sensation and a tingling sensation throughout her left leg.” She said the weakness and numbing sensation had immediately caused her to lose control of her balance when she collapsed and fell on her left leg as well as on her left foot, which folded underneath her buttock area. She subsequently fell on the left side of her buttock. The claimant heard a “crack come from her left foot and felt a tremendous amount of pain in her left foot.” Her husband, Mr. Whitney, assisted her up into their vehicle, and he transported her to San Antonio Hospital Emergency Room.…
Plaintiff and Defendant: The plaintiff/appellant is Harvestons Securities, Inc. The defendant/appellee is Narnia Investments, Ltd.…
a. Amended b. Successor employer c. No payments to employees in 2010 d. Final: Business closed or stopped paying wages…
2. How does John’s outlook about receiving help affect his ability to get his needs met?…
As part of his contract at his new job, Jim is provided a company car and gas card to go back and forth to work. He sometimes uses the car for out-of-town travel approximately once a month. Jim also uses the car and the gas card for his family vacations, dinner, etc.…
A casualty is the damage, destruction, or loss of property resulting from an identifiable event that is sudden, unexpected, or unusual. Evidentially, the total loss the Mendezs suffered from their second home collapsing into a sink hole is (would?) qualified as a personal casualty loss under this Section. The portion of the loss sustained that is not compensated for by their homeowner insurance policy is eligible for itemized deduction provided that the Mendezs file a timely claim for…
PREFACE The Internal Revenue Code, approved February 10, 1939, and published in this volume as Public Act No. 1 of the Seventy-sixth Congress, is the first Federal act of its kind since the Revised Statutes of the United States, approved…
Is Software Inc. liable for the cost of the ring Coleman stole? I would say no. Even though Coleman was on a business trip acting as an agent of the company, going to the jewelry store was not part of his job. “A person dealing with an agent cannot hold the principal liable for any act or transaction of the agent not within the scope of his/her actual or apparent authority” (USLEGAL, Inc., 2012). If Coleman had been in the jewelry store doing business, then Software Inc. could be held liable.…
March 3: Venture Consultants made credit purchases for office equipment for $3,000 and office supplies for $1,200. Payment is due within 10 days.…
f. The taxpayer’s uninsured personal residence that recently was destroyed by fire. Could be an itemized deduction under the casualty and theft losses section, if the loss exceeded 10%. You have to account for the increase in effective tax rate.…
Joan Smith, a single mom has been collecting rare coins for the last several years. She is getting old and in 2014, she gathered her coins and took them to her longtime friend who owns several pawn shops in Houston. The owner of the pawn shop valued these coins at $80,000. She donated the coins to a public charity and deducted $80,000 charitable deduction on her 2014 tax return. The IRS denied the deduction.…