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CHAPTER 8 8 Partnerships: Characteristics, Formation, and Accounting for Activities Fundamentals of Advanced Accounting 1st Edition Fischer, Taylor, and Cheng
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Characteristics of a Partnership
Association of two or more people as co-owners of a business Often governed by the Uniform Partnership Act (UPA) Voluntary association of individuals Partners have fiduciary relationship Mutual agency – Each partner is an agent for other partners and the partnership Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Legal Liability of Partnerships
General partnership Partners are general partners All partners personally liable for all obligations of the partnership Limited partnership One or more general partners Personally liable for obligations of the partnership One or more limited partners Maximum risk of loss is capital in the partnership Do not participate in management of the firm Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Legal Liability of Partnerships - continued
Limited Liability Company (LLC) Hybrid of corporation and partnership Shareholders do not have personal liability for actions by the entity Not protected from their own wrongdoings Limited Liability Partnership (LLP) All partners participate in management Partners have limited liability caused by wrongdoings of other partners Partners are personally liable based on their own actions or actions of those supervised Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Equity Theories Proprietary Theory – Entity is viewed as the individual owners Salaries to partners are distributions of income (not expenses) Unlimited liability extends to personal assets of owners Partnership is not a taxable entity – income is passed through and taxed to the individual partners Original partnership is dissolved with admission or withdrawal of a partner Entity Theory – business unit separate & distinct Partnership enters contracts in it’s own name Partners give up title to their contributions Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Formation and Agreements
Partnerships can be formed just by actions The partnership agreement captures the intent of the partners for major issues Admission of partners Withdrawal of partners Allocation of profits and losses Uniform Partnership Act (UPA) covers some topics in the partnership agreement Mostly used when there is no formal agreement or if the agreement is silent on an issue Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Acceptable Accounting Principles
Partnerships may use GAAP Not required if it adversely affects fairness of financial statements There are other comprehensive basis of accounting (OCBOA) principles applicable Cash basis accounting Tax basis accounting Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Accounts Used for a Partner’s Capital Investment
Drawing account A temporary account Periodically closed to capital accounts Represent assets withdrawn by partner from partnership Capital account A permanent account Represents partner’s interest in the net assets of the partnership (book value) Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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The Drawing Account Illustrated
Debit Periodic withdrawals of partnership assets Credit Closing of balance to partner’s capital account Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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The Capital Account Illustrated
Debit Withdrawals in excess of a specified amount Closing of a net debit balance in the partner’s drawing account Partner’s share of partnership losses Credit Initial and subsequent investments of capital Partner’s share of partnership profits Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Partner’s Interest A partner’s interest in the net assets (book value) of the firm is different from their interest in profits and losses Partner may have a loan account Partner borrows from the partnership Partnership borrow from the partner Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Initial Capital Investment
Assets contributed by the partners are recorded at the agreed upon fair value Example Partner A contributes cash Partner B contributes inventory & office equipment Partnership assumes debt on the equipment Equipment has $6,000 book value and $4,000 fair value Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Initial Capital Investment – Journal Entry
Cash 10,000 Inventory 5,000 Office equipment 4,000 Note payable 2,000 Partner A, Capital 10,000 Partner B, Capital 7,000 Note: Office equipment is recorded at fair value B’s capital account is reduce by loan assumed by the partnership Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Review – Partnership entries
Partner A loans partnership cash DR Cash CR Partner A, Capital Personal debt of partner B paid by partnership DR Partner B, Drawing CR Cash Partner B withdraws cash from partnership Net income is divided between partners A & B DR Income Summary CR Partner B, Capital Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Division of Profits Should be identified in partnership agreement
If not, UPA says divide it evenly Several methods for allocating profit/loss According to a ratio/percentage According to capital investments of the partners According to the labor/service rendered by partners Typically involving a salary and/or bonus Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Profit and Loss ratios Partners are allocated % of profits/losses.
Example: $20,000 profit Partner A receives 60% x $20,000 Partner B receives 40% x $20,000 Total Partner A Partner B Total Profit $20,000 Allocate 60/40 $12,000 $8,000 Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Capital Investment of Partners
Division of profits based on imputing interest on invested capital at a specified rate Example Partnership profit is $20,000 Interest on capital balances, 10% (before withdrawals) Remaining profit allocated equally Partner accounts are as follows: Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Capital Investment of Partners (continued)
Interest is computed on beginning capital balances Other alternatives: Ending capital balances Average capital balances (weighted average) Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Services Rendered by Partners
Partner’s labor/service may be key to generating partnership revenue Allocate portion of income to partner as “salary” Not an actual expense to partnership Not considered drawing “Bonus” may recognize partner’s service % of income before or after other criteria Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Services Rendered by Partners - Example
Net Income = $120,000 Allocation of salaries = $60,000 Allocation of interest = $5,000 Bonus = 10% of income after salaries and interest Bonus = X% (Net income – Salaries – Interest) Bonus = 10% (120,000 – 60,000 – 5,000) Bonus = 10% (55,000) Bonus = $5,500 Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Multiple Bases of Allocation - Example
Example – ABC Partnership Net Income = $33,000 Interest = 6% of ending capital balances over $100,000 Partner A Ending Bal = $80,000 Partner B Ending Bal = $150,000 Partner C Ending Bal = $110,000 Bonus = Partner C, 10% of NI after bonus Salaries Partner A = $13,000 Partner B = $12,000 Balance of income 2:1:1 to A, B & C, respectively Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Basic Schedule for Allocating Profits Illustration 8-2
Bonus is calculated as follows: Bonus = 10% (Net income – Bonus) Bonus = 10% (33,000 – Bonus) Bonus x 110% = $3,300 Bonus = $3,000 Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Allocation of Profit Deficiencies and Losses: Two Alternatives
Satisfy all provisions of the profit and loss agreement Use the profit and loss ratios to absorb any deficiency or additional loss caused by such action Satisfy each of the provisions to whatever extent is possible For example, the allocation of salaries would be satisfied to whatever extent possible before the allocation of interest is begun Ranked by order of priority Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Deficiency Allocated By Order Of Priority
Profit allocation - Deficiency Allocated By P/L Ratio – Illustration 8-3 Bonus is calculated as follows: Bonus = 10% (Net income – Bonus) Bonus = 10% (22,000 – Bonus) Bonus x 110% = $2,200 Bonus = $2,000 Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Deficiency Allocated By Order Of Priority
Loss Allocation - Deficiency Allocated By P/L Ratio – Illustration 8-4 No bonus is calculated since it is based on a percentage of profit Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Deficiency Allocated By Order Of Priority
Profit allocation - Deficiency Allocated By Order of Priority – Illustration 8-5 Deficiency Allocated By Order Of Priority Bonus is calculated as follows: Bonus = 10% (Net income – Bonus) Bonus = 10% (22,000 – Bonus) Bonus x 110% = $2,200 Bonus = $2,000 Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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Special Allocation Procedures
Partnership agreement may include special provisions for items that represent Correction of prior year’s income Current period non-operating gains/losses May be more equitable to base allocation on prior ratios Copyright 2008 by Thomson South-Western, a part of The Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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