Unit 9 Assignment Tax

Unit 9 Assignment Tax

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Tax Return

The information for your Final Project is found in Problem C:3-66 on pages 3-66 through 3-68 of Prentice Hall’s Federal Taxation, 2015. Complete Form 1120 for 2013 and its related schedules.

In order to complete this exercise, you must first download the tax form.

Directions for Using the PDF Tax Forms from the IRS website

The forms available from IRS.gov have document rights applied to them. Unlike most other PDF forms you may have encountered, these rights applied to these forms allow you to fill in all sections and to save your work.

The only software required to use these forms is the Adobe Acrobat Reader, which should already be installed on your computer.

Here is Problem 3-66 through 3-68:

TAX FORM/RETURN PREPARATION PROBLEMS

C:3-66Melodic Musical Sales, Inc. is located at 5500 Fourth Avenue, City, ST 98765. The corporation uses the calendar year and accrual basis for both book and tax purposes. It is engaged in the sale of musical instruments with an employer identification number (EIN) of XX-2015013. The company incorporated on December 31, 2009, and began business on January 2, 2010. Table C:3-4 contains balance sheet information at January 1, 2013, and December 31, 2013. Table C:3-5 presents an income statement for 2013. These schedules are presented on a book basis. Other information follows the tables.

Estimated Tax Payments (Form 2220):

The corporation deposited estimated tax payments as follows:

April 15, 2013 $120,000
June 17, 2013 241,000
September 16, 2013 290,000
December 16, 2013 290,000
Total $941,000

Some dates are the 16th or 17th because the 15th falls on a weekend or holiday. Taxable income in 2012 was $1.2 million, and the 2012 tax was $408,000. The corporation earned its 2013 taxable income evenly throughout the year. Therefore, it does not use the annualization or seasonal methods.

TABLE C:3-4 Melodic Musical Sales, Inc.—Book Balance Sheet Information

  January 1, 2013 December 31, 2013
Account Debit Credit Debit Credit
Cash $  125,614   $  289,607  
Accounts receivable 455,112   529,200  
Allowance for doubtful accounts   $    22,756   $    26,460
Inventory 2,450,000   3,430,000  
Investment in corporate stock 370,000   50,000  
Investment in municipal bonds 32,000   32,000  
Net current deferred tax asset 12,837   8,996  
Cash surrender value of insurance policy 42,000   57,000  
Land 300,000   300,000  
Buildings 2,000,000   2,000,000  
Accumulated depreciation—Buildings   100,000   140,000
Equipment 900,000   2,800,000  
Accumulated depreciation—Equipment   150,000   250,000
Trucks 280,000   280,000  
Accumulated depreciation—Trucks   84,000   140,000
Accounts payable   340,000   306,000
Notes payable (short-term)   650,000   520,000
Accrued payroll taxes   14,700   18,375
Accrued state income taxes   8,820   14,700
Accrued federal income taxes       127,584
Bonds payable (long-term)   2,500,000   3,000,000
Net noncurrent deferred tax liability   157,287   219,711
Capital stock—Common   980,000   980,000
Retain earnings—unappropriated   1,960,000   4,033,973
Totals $6,967,563 $6,967,563 $9,776,803 $9,776,803

Inventory and Cost of Goods Sold (Form 1125-A):

The corporation uses the periodic inventory method and prices its inventory using the lower of FIFO cost or market. Only beginning inventory, ending inventory, and purchases should be reflected on Form 1125-A. No other costs or expenses are allocated to cost of goods sold. Note: the corporation is exempt from the uniform capitalization (UNICAP) rules because average gross income for the previous three years was less than $10 million.

Line 9 (a) Check (ii)
            (b), (c) & (d) Not applicable
            (e) & (f) No

Compensation of Officers (Form 1125-E):

(a) (b) (c) (d) (f)
Mary Travis XXX-XX-XXXX 100% 50% $287,000
John Willis XXX-XX-XXXX 100% 25%  175,000
Chris Parker XXX-XX-XXXX 100% 25%  175,000
Total   $637,000

Bad Debts:

For tax purposes, the corporation uses the direct writeoff method of deducting bad debts. For book purposes, the corporation uses an allowance for doubtful accounts. During 2013, the corporation charged $39,200 to the allowance account, such amount representing actual writeoffs for 2013.

TABLE C:3-5 Melodic Musical Sales, Inc.—Book Income Statement 2013

Sales   $  9,800,000
Returns   (245,000)
Net sales   $  9,555,000
Beginning inventory $2,450,000  
Purchases 5,390,000  
Ending inventory (3,430,000)  
Cost of goods sold   (4,410,000)
Gross profit   $ 5,145,000
Expenses:    
   Amortization $          –0–  
   Depreciation 256,000  
   Repairs 20,384  
   General ins. 53,900  
   Net premium-Off. life ins. 44,100  
   Officer’s compensation 637,000  
   Other salaries 392,000  
   Utilities 70,560  
   Advertising 47,040  
   Legal and accounting fees 49,000  
   Charitable contributions 29,400  
   Payroll taxes 61,250  
   Interest expense 205,800  
   Bad debt expense 42,904  
Total expenses   (1,909,338)
Gain on sale of equipment   80,000
Interest on municipal bonds   4,900
Net gain on stock sales   48,000
Dividend income   11,760
Net income before income taxes   $ 3,380,322
Federal income tax expense   (1,134,849)
State income tax expense   (73,500)
Net income   $ 2,171,973

Additional Information (Schedule K):

1 b Accrual
2 a 451140
 b Retail sales
 c Musical instruments
3 No
4 a No
 b Yes; omit Schedule G
5 a No
 b No
6-7 No
 8 Do not check box
 9 Fill in the correct amount
10 3
11 Do not check box
12 Not applicable
13–14 No
15a No
  b Not applicable
16–18 No

Organizational Expenditures:

The corporation incurred $14,000 of organizational expenditures on January 2, 2009. For book purposes, the corporation expensed the entire expenditure. For tax purposes, the corporation elected under Sec. 248 to deduct $5,000 in 2010 and amortize the remaining $9,000 amount over 180 months, with a full month’s amortization taken for January 2010. The corporation reports this amortization in Part VI of Form 4562 and includes it in “Other Deductions” on Form 1120, Line 26.

Capital Gains and Losses:

The corporation sold 100 shares of PDQ Corp. common stock on October 8, 2013, for $200,000. The corporation acquired the stock on December 15, 2012, for $140,000. The corporation also sold 75 shares of JSB Corp. common stock on June 18, 2013, for $168,000. The corporation acquired this stock on September 18, 2011, for $180,000. The corporation has an $8,000 capital loss carryover from 2011.

Fixed Assets and Depreciation:

For book purposes: The corporation uses straight-line depreciation over the useful lives of assets as follows: Store building, 50 years; Equipment, 15 years (old) and ten years (new); and Trucks, five years. The corporation takes a half-year’s depreciation in the year of acquisition and the year of disposition and assumes no salvage value. The book financial statements in Tables C:3-4 and C:3-5 reflect these calculations.

For tax purposes: All assets are MACRS property as follows: Store building, 39-year nonresidential real property; equipment, seven-year property; and trucks, five-year property. The corporation acquired the store building for $2 million and placed it in service on January 2, 2010. The corporation acquired two pieces of equipment for $300,000 (Equipment 1) and $600,000 (Equipment 2) and placed them in service on January 2, 2010. The corporation acquired the trucks for $280,000 and placed them in service on July 18, 2011. The trucks are not listed property and are not subject to the limitation on luxury automobiles. The corporation did not make the expensing election under Sec. 179 or take bonus depreciation on any property acquired before 2013. Accumulated tax depreciation through December 31, 2012, on these properties is as follows:

Store building $ 151,780
Equipment 1    168,810
Equipment 2    337,620
Trucks    145,600

On October 16, 2013, the corporation sold for $320,000 Equipment 1 that originally cost 300,000 on January 2, 2010. The corporation had no Sec. 1231 losses from prior years. In a separate transaction on October 17, 2013, the corporation acquired and placed in service a piece of equipment costing $2.2 million. Assume these two transactions do not qualify as a like-kind exchange under Reg. Sec. 1.1031(k)-1(a). The new equipment is seven-year property. The corporation made the Sec. 179 expensing election with regard to the new equipment but elected out of bonus depreciation. Where applicable, use published IRS depreciation tables to compute 2013 depreciation (reproduced in Appendix C of this text).

Other Information:

  • • The corporation’s activities do not qualify for the U.S. production activities deduction.
  • • Ignore the AMT and accumulated earnings tax.
  • • The corporation received dividends (see Income Statement in Table C:3-5) from taxable, domestic corporations, the stock of which Melodic Musical Sales, Inc. owns less than 20%.
  • • The corporation paid $98,000 in cash dividends to its shareholders during the year and charged the payment directly to retained earnings.
  • • The state income tax in Table C:3-5 is the exact amount of such taxes incurred during the year.
  • • The corporation is not entitled any credits.
  • • Ignore the financial statement impact of any underpayment penalties incurred on the tax return.

Required: Prepare the 2013 corporate tax return for Melodic Musical Sales, Inc. along with any necessary supporting schedules.

Optional: Prepare both Schedule M-3 (but omit Schedule B) and Schedule M-1 even though the IRS does not require both Schedule M-1 and Schedule M-3.

Note to Instructor: See solution in the Instructor’s Guide for other optional information to provide to students.

C:3-67Permtemp Corporation formed in 2012 and, for that year, reported the following book income statement and balance sheet, excluding the federal income tax expense, deferred tax assets, and deferred tax liabilities:

Sales   $20,000,000
Cost of goods sold   (15,000,000)
Gross profit   $   5,000,000
Dividend income            50,000
Tax-exempt interest income           15,000
Total income   $ 5,065,000
Expenses:    
   Depreciation $     800,000  
   Bad debts       400,000  
   Charitable contributions       100,000  
   Interest       475,000  
   Meals and entertainment       45,000  
   Other  3,855,000  
Total expenses   (5,675,000)
Net loss before federal income taxes   $ (610,000)
Cash   $   500,000
Accounts receivable $ 2,000,000  
Allowance for doubtful accounts    (250,000)  1,750,000
Inventory    4,000,000
Fixed assets $10,000,000  
Accumulated depreciation   (800,000)  9,200,000
Investment in corporate stock    1,000,000
Investment in tax-exempt bonds         50,000
Total assets   $16,500,000
Accounts payable   $2,610,000
Long-term debt     8,500,000
Common stock     6,000,000
Retained earnings      (610,000)
Total liabilities and equity   $16,500,000

Additional information for 2012:

  • • The investment in corporate stock is comprised of less-than-20%-owned corporations.
  • • Depreciation for tax purposes is $1.4 million under MACRS.
  • • Bad debt expense for tax purposes is $150,000 under the direct writeoff method.
  • • Limitations to charitable contribution deductions and meals and entertainment expenses must be tested and applied if necessary.
  • • Qualified production activities income is zero.

Required for 2012:

  • a. Prepare page 1 of the 2012 Form 1120, computing the corporation’s NOL.
  • b. Determine the corporation’s deferred tax asset and deferred tax liability situation, and then complete the income statement and balance sheet to reflect proper GAAP accounting under ASC 740. Use the balance sheet information to prepare Schedule L of the 2012 Form 1120.
  • c. Prepare the 2012 Schedule M-3 for Form 1120.
  • d. Prepare a schedule that reconciles the corporation’s effective tax rate to the statutory 34% tax rate.

Note: For 2012 forms, go to forms and publications, previous years, at the IRS website, www.irs.gov.

For 2013, Permtemp reported the following book income statement and balance sheet, excluding the federal income tax expense, deferred tax assets, and deferred tax liabilities:

Sales   $33,000,000
Cost of goods sold   (22,000,000)
Gross profit   $11,000,000
Dividend income   55,000
Tax-exempt interest income   15,000
Total income   $11,070,000
Expenses:    
   Depreciation $    800,000  
   Bad debts 625,000  
   Charitable contributions 40,000  
   Interest 455,000  
   Meals and entertainment 60,000  
   Other 4,675,000  
Total expenses   (6,655,000)
Net income before federal income taxes   $ 4,415,000
Cash   $ 2,125,000
Accounts receivable $ 3,300,000  
Allowance for doubtful accounts (450,000) 2,850,000
Inventory   6,000,000
Fixed assets $10,000,000  
Accumulated depreciation (1,600,000) 8,400,000
Investment in corporate stock   1,000,000
Investment in tax-exempt bonds   50,000
Total assets   $20,425,000
Accounts payable   $ 2,120,000
Long-term debt   8,500,000
Common stock   6,000,000
Retained earnings   3,805,000
    $20,425,000

Additional information for 2013:

  • • Depreciation for tax purposes is $2.45 million under MACRS.
  • • Bad debt expense for tax purposes is $425,000 under the direct writeoff method.
  • • Qualified production activities income is $3 million.

Required for 2013:

  • a. Prepare page 1 of the 2013 Form 1120, computing the corporation’s taxable income and tax liability.
  • b. Determine the corporation’s deferred tax asset and deferred tax liability situation, and then complete the income statement and balance sheet to reflect proper GAAP accounting ASC 740. Use the balance sheet information to prepare Schedule L of the 2013 Form 1120.
  • c. Prepare the 2013 Schedule M-3 for Form 1120.
  • d. Prepare a schedule that reconciles the corporation’s effective tax rate to the statutory 34% tax rate.

CASE STUDY PROBLEMS

C:3-68Marquette Corporation, a tax client since its creation three years ago, has requested that you prepare a memorandum explaining its estimated tax requirements for the current year. The corporation is in the fabricated steel business. Its earnings have been growing each year. Marquette’s taxable income for the last three tax years has been $500,000, $1.5 million, and $2.5 million, respectively. The Chief Financial Officer expects its taxable income in the current year to be approximately $3 million.

Required: Prepare a one-page client memorandum explaining Marquette’s estimated tax requirements for the current year, providing the necessary supporting authorities.