In: Accounting
Van Rushing Hunting Goods’ fiscal year ends on December 31. At
the end of the 2021 fiscal year, the company had notes payable of
$4.2 million due on February 8, 2022. Rushing sold 3.0 million
shares of its $0.25 par, common stock on February 3, 2022, for $3.0
million. The proceeds from that sale along with $1.2 million from
the maturation of some 3-month CDs were used to pay the notes
payable on February 8.
Through his attorney, one of Rushing’s construction workers
notified management on January 5, 2022, that he planned to sue the
company for $1 million related to a work-site injury on December
20, 2021. As of December 31, 2021, management had been unaware of
the injury, but reached an agreement on February 23, 2022, to
settle the matter by paying the employee’s medical bills of
$70,500.
Rushing’s financial statements were finalized on March 3,
2022.
Required:
1. What amount(s) if any, related to the
situations described should Rushing report among current
liabilities in its balance sheet at December 31, 2021?
2. What amount(s) if any, related to the
situations described should Rushing report among long-term
liabilities in its balance sheet at December 31, 2021?
3. What amount(s) if any, related to the
situations described should Rushing report among current
liabilities and long-term liabilities in its balance sheet at
December 31, 2021 if the settlement agreement had occurred on March
15, 2022, instead?
4. What amount(s) if any, related to the
situations described should Rushing report among current
liabilities and long-term liabilities in its balance sheet at
December 31, 2021 if the work-site injury had occurred on January
3, 2022, instead?
(For all requirements, enter your answers in whole
dollars.)
1 Current liability
2 Long-term liability
3 Current liability
Long term liability
4 Current liability
Long-term liability