The question is vague, but both Trust and Escrow accounts would seem to be applicable.
A cheque which received from customers and deposited to the company account and gone through clearing system and not yet credited to the company bank account
A cheque which received from customers and deposited to the company account and gone through clearing system and not yet credited to the company bank account
Bank Overdraft as Liability by Kayors Yes, a bank overdraft are classified as a current liability. What happens here is withdrawls from the bank exceed deposits. The lending institution, usually the bank, would allow an extension of credit in such a case. The company is usually expected to pay within short-term and it results in negative balance in company's bank account. That is the reason for the overdraft being classified as a current liability.
The total amount of debts payable by a business to its owners are called internal liabilities e.g., capital.Example-For a company Internal liability mean that company will pay salary, so salary is internal liability, and the company will pay interest to bank it is external liability.
If you received money that you were not entitled to and you deposited the insurance check into your bank account and the money was a payout from an insurance claim, the insurance company can swipe the money out of your account without your prior knowledge for up to 3 years. If you received money as a result of a criminal act, the statute of limitations for that crime would guide the insurance company's timeline.
Unearned Revenue :)
A liability account is anything the company owes. Accounts Payable, Notes Payable, these are two examples of a liability account. Unearned Revenue is another example of a liability account. Unearned revenue is revenue a company has received but has not yet fulfilled their obligation to the customer. Because the company is now liable for either providing the product (or service) to the customer or refunding the money paid by said customer, it is a liability account until all obligations are fulfilled.
These are amounts which have already received but the benefits of which have not yet provided by the company to costumers that's why these amounts are the liability of company until not refund or befits for required services are provided to them
A liability account is anything the company owes. Accounts Payable, Notes Payable, these are two examples of a liability account. Unearned Revenue is another example of a liability account. Unearned revenue is revenue a company has received but has not yet fulfilled their obligation to the customer. Because the company is now liable for either providing the product (or service) to the customer or refunding the money paid by said customer, it is a liability account until all obligations are fulfilled.
Account payable is an account that is a Liability (current). When a person or company owes another company money on account, that is an account payable.
Accounts payable are ALWAYS listed as a Liability. It is money the company OWES and therefore is a liability to that company.
You cannot convert an Individual Retirement Account into a Limited Liability Company.You cannot convert an Individual Retirement Account into a Limited Liability Company.You cannot convert an Individual Retirement Account into a Limited Liability Company.You cannot convert an Individual Retirement Account into a Limited Liability Company.
Any liability the company reasonably expects to have paid in full in one year or less (or one accounting period) is a current liability.
Any liability the company reasonably expects to have paid in full in one year or less (or one accounting period) is a current liability.
Generally speaking, no. A payable account is a liability account where the company owes something. If you have a payable on your books it's something you "owe" another person/company. Prepayment refers to something that is "prepaid" or paid before hand. Prepaid accounts are generally considered "assets" on your books. For example "Prepaid Insurance" would be listed in your assets. If your company prepays for something, you list it on your books as an asset of some form. If you ordered computers from another company and prepay for receiving them, your books will list this transaction as an account receivable, which is an asset account because now the company you paid the computers for "owes you" and it will be an asset on your account. Now if we reverse this transaction and a company pays your company for computers that it has not received yet, then it becomes a liability on your account (i.e. account payable) because you now owe that company something. Therefore a payable account of any kind can not be listed as a prepayment.
Anything "owed" is a liability to the company until it is paid.Gathering what I can from the question, I am assuming the "vendor" would be a person/company that supplies a product that another company resales for profit. In other words it is their Inventory, When the merchandise is recieved, at the moment of receipt if the amount isn't paid and is put on account (owed) then journal entry is adebit to Inventorycredit to Account Payable.Since this is a debt it is recorded as a liability, once it is paid however, the transaction goes as followsdebit to Account Payablecredit to CashThe inventory itself remains an asset until it is sold, then the asset decreases and then and only then is the cost initially paid recorded as an expense.
A liability account is money owed by a company. Such as Accounts Payable and Notes Payable.A transaction that would increase a liability account is if you purchased an item on account. This would increase either the Account Payable or Note Payable accounts.A transaction that would decrease these are actual payments you make to the person/company you owe, hence lowering the balance of how much is owed.For example, I purchase a truck costing $15,000, that transaction has increased my liability in notes payable. Once I begin making payments on that truck, each of those payments will decrease the liability.