Ethics and Decision Making
Assume that you just completed a December weekend vacation to a casino within the United States. During your trip you won $10,000 gambling. When the casino exchanged your chips for cash they did not record any personal information, such as your driver’s license number or social security number. Four months later while preparing your tax returns for the prior year, you stop to contemplate the fact that the Internal Revenue Service requires taxpayers to report all gambling winnings on form 1040.
Required:
Would you report your gambling winnings to the Internal Revenue Service so that you could pay federal income taxes on those winnings? Do you believe that your actions are ethical? Why?
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Introduction To Managerial Accounting
- Your client is preparing financial statements to show the bank. You know that he has incurred a refrigeration repair expense during the month, but you see no such expense on the books. When you question the client, he tells you that he has not yet paid the 1,255 bill. Your client is on the accrual basis of accounting. He does not want the refrigeration repair expense on the books as of the end of the month because he wants his profits to look good for the bank. Is your client behaving ethically by suggesting that the refrigeration repair expense not be booked until the 1,255 is paid? Are you behaving ethically if you agree to the clients request? What principle is involved here?arrow_forwardTom gave his daughter, Nicole, permission to access his business account online but not his principal account. Tom has just discovered that Nicole took P25,000 from the principal account (current account) hoping her father would not notice it. As Tom wrote to the manager of his local bank months ago, expressly forbidding the bank to allow his daughter to do this, he wants the bank to refund the P25,000. With respect to BDO Online Account Opening Service (“Service”) Terms and Conditions, what recommendation can you give him?arrow_forwardJane Marks has a restaurant in which she accepts credit cards and checks.Several of the places that Jane shops now accept debit cards and do notaccept checks. Jane’s banker explained that a debit card would immediatelytransfer money into her account, but it would cost $50 per monthfor the equipment and bank charges. Although she requires proper identification,Jane loses approximately $590 a year as a result of bad checks.She also determined that on average, she loses 115 days of interest onall checks because the banks are closed on 11 holidays and weekends (52 weeks * 2 weekend days = 104 + 11 holidays). Jane currently earns3 percent interest on her bank accounts and accepts an average of $2,000 aday in checks.a. What is the total annual cost to Jane for the debit card service?b. What is the benefit?c. Should Jane implement the system?arrow_forward
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- James Cooper sells memberships to the Atlanta Symphony Association. TheAssociation’s procedure requires that Cooper prepare and give each customer a receipt for eachmembership sold. The receipt forms are prenumbered. Cooper is having personal financialproblems, and he kept the $500 cash received from a customer for a new membership. To hidehis theft, Cooper destroyed the Association’s copy of the receipt that he gave to the customer.What will alert manager Terry Reynolds that something is wrong?arrow_forwardOn Thursday, Justin flies from Baltimore (where his sole proprietorship office is located) to Cadiz (Spain). He conducts business on Friday and Tuesday; vacations on Saturday, Sunday, and Monday (a legal holiday in Spain); and returns to Baltimore on Thursday. Justin was scheduled to return home on Wednesday, but all flights were canceled due to bad weather. As a result, he spent Wednesday watching floor shows at a local casino. a. For tax purposes, what portion of Justins trip is regarded as being for business? b. Suppose Monday was not a legal holiday. Would this change your answer to part (a)? Explain. c. Under either part (a) or (b), how much of Justins airfare qualifies as a deductible business expense?arrow_forwardNeeding continuing education hours to renew your CPA license, you, a sensible person, decide to combine business and pleasure. So you find a tax conference in Miami and buy a round-trip ticket for $400. The conference is Tuesday-Friday. Bright and early on Saturday morning you hop into your rental car and drive down the “Overseas Highway” to Key West, where you party and stay over. On Sunday afternoon you reluctantly return to Miami and fly home. How much, if any, of your airfare is deductible, and why?arrow_forward
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- College Accounting (Book Only): A Career ApproachAccountingISBN:9781337280570Author:Scott, Cathy J.Publisher:South-Western College Pub