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Book keeping Notes

CLASSIFICATION OF LEDGER ACCOUNTS

There are two main classes of ledger accounts. These are

i.        Personal Accounts

ii.       Impersonal Account.

Impersonal Accounts are sub-divided into two, namely real account and nominal account.

(1)     Personal Accounts: These are accounts in which transactions with persons and other businesses and organizations are recorded. Debtors and creditors’ accounts are typical examples. If the balances are due for settlement within a year, they represent current assets and current liabilities respectively.

Note: The capital account is a special kind of personal account. It is an account in which the value of the proprietor’s investment in the business is recorded.

It is therefore the proprietor’s or owner’s personal account.

(2)     Impersonal Accounts: These are accounts which record transactions of either “real or nominal” nature. Impersonal accounts are therefore usually divided into “real” and nominal accounts.

(i)      Real Account: These record transactions relating to property and material objects. Examples of such accounts include; Land and buildings, cash at bank, motor vehicles, furniture and fittings, stock of goods for resale. They are known as tangible assets because we can see and touch them. All accounts that relate to tangible assets are therefore real accounts.

(ii)     Nominal Account:  Nominal accounts relate to items that exist in name only. You cannot touch or see such items as they have no physical form. Examples include income, expenses, losses and gains which have been incurred. Thus, wages and salaries general expenses, rents and rates, interest and dividends received (or paid for), are examples of nominal accounts.

THE DIVISION OF THE LEDGER

A business that is fairly small can conveniently maintain a single ledger in which transactions are recorded by one clerk. But, if the firm is bigger in size, such practice can create problems. First, the work might be too much for one clerk to handle effectively. Secondly, the book can become too unwieldy to permit the extraction of information in time, if and when the need arises. To minimize these problems, it is often considered necessary to divide the ledger into several parts, each concern with specific classes of transactions. The usual divisions of the ledgers are as follows:

(1)     SALES LEDGER

This is also called “sold ledger” or “debtors ledger”. The sales ledger contains a separate account for each individual to whom goods have been sold, or for whom services have been performed on credit.

The sales ledger is referred to as the debtors’ ledger because it contains the personal accounts of debtors to the business.

2.       PURCHASE LEDGER

          This is called a “bought Ledger” or “creditors Ledger”. It contains the personal accounts of creditors. A creditor is a supplier from whom goods or services have been obtained to be paid for at an agreed future date.

          Until payment is made, the amount owing is reflected by a credit balance in the personal account of the supplier in the ledger. Such an amount is normally classified under current liabilities in the balance sheet.

          Interpretation of a purchases ledger account.

          The following is an example of a creditor’s account in the purchases ledger.

Dr.                                           R. Makinde                                        Cr.

DateParticularsFolioAmount NDateParticularsF.Amount N
19X 8   19X 8   
May 15Cash21,080May 1Balanceb/d755
May 15Discount received7120May 12Purchases4445
May 13Purchases41,000
May 16Purchases returns5100    
    
May 31Balancec/d900    
        
   2,200   2,200
    June 1Balanceb/d900
        

i.        The folio numbers and columns have the same interpretation as in the preceding example.

ii.       May 1 on this date R. Makinde was owed N755. This is reflected by a credit balance in his personal account.

iii.      May 12 & 13. Goods were bough on credit from R. Makinde on these dates for N445 and N1000 respectively.

iv.      May 15 N1,080 was paid to Makinde in cash in full settlement of the amount owed at the beginning of the month and credit purchases made on may 12th for Making this payment promptly, a discount of 10% on (N755 + N445), N1,200 was received.

v.       May 16th, of the goods bought on May 13th, goods worth N100 were returned to Makinde on this date probably because they were faulty or damaged.

vi.      At the end of the month, N900 was owing to Makinde.

3.       GENERAL LEDGER: This is the ledger in which most deal and nominal accounts are kept. For example, the discount allowed and discount received accounts would normally be kept in the general ledger as would many other accounts.

4.       PRIVATE LEDGER: This is a ledger which, for confidential and security reasons, is kept by either the proprietor or the accountant outside the reach of office staff. Examples of accounts which would normally be kept in such a ledger include capital, drawings and profit and loss account.

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