Learning Outcomes
- Apply cost principles to different categories of plant assets
Initial recording of plant assets
When a company acquires a plant asset, accountants record the asset at the cost of acquisition (historical cost). When a plant asset is purchased for cash, its acquisition cost is simply the agreed on cash price. This cost is objective, verifiable, and the best measure of an asset’s fair market value at the time of purchase. Fair market value is the price received for an item sold in the normal course of business (not at a forced liquidation sale). Even if the market value of the asset changes over time, accountants continue to report the acquisition cost in the asset account for subsequent periods.
The acquisition cost of a plant asset is the amount of cost incurred to acquire and place the asset in operating condition at its proper location. Cost includes all normal, reasonable, and necessary expenditures to obtain the asset and get it ready for use. Acquisition cost also includes the repair and reconditioning costs for used or damaged assets as long as the item was not damaged after purchase. Unnecessary costs (such as traffic tickets, fines, or repairs that occurred after purchase) that must be paid as a result of hauling machinery to a new plant are not part of the acquisition cost of the asset.
Determining the Cost of Land
The cost of land includes its purchase price and other many other costs, including:
- real estate commissions
- title search and title transfer fees
- title insurance premiums
- existing mortgage note or unpaid taxes (back taxes) assumed by the purchaser
- costs of surveying, clearing, and grading
- local assessments for sidewalks, streets, sewers, and water mains
- sometimes land purchased as a building site contains an unusable building that must be removed
The accountant debits the entire costs to the Land account, including the cost of removing the building less any cash received from the sale of salvaged items while the land is being readied for use. Land is considered to have an unlimited life and is therefore not depreciable. However, land improvements, including driveways, temporary landscaping, parking lots, fences, lighting systems, and sprinkler systems, are attachments to the land. They have limited lives and therefore are depreciable. Owners record depreciable land improvements in a separate account called Land Improvements. They record the cost of permanent landscaping, including leveling and grading, in the Land account.
To illustrate, assume that on February 1, Spivey Company closed a deal on an old farm on the outskirts of San Diego as a factory site. The contract price for the property was $225,000. In addition, the company agreed to pay unpaid property taxes from previous periods (called back taxes) of $12,000. Attorneys’ fees and other legal costs relating to the purchase of the farm totaled $1,800. Spivey demolished (razed) the farm buildings at a cost of $18,000. The company salvaged some of the structural pieces of the building and sold them for $3,000. Because the firm was constructing a new building at the site, the city assessed Spivey Company $9,000 for water mains, sewers, and street paving. Spivey computed the capitalized cost of the land as follows:
Cost of factory site | $225,000 |
---|---|
Back taxes | 12,000 |
Attorneys’ fees and other legal costs | 1,800 |
Demolition | 18,000 |
Sale of salvaged parts | (3,000) |
City assessment | 9,000 Single line |
Total Land Cost | $262,800 |
Determining the Cost of a Building
Similarly, when a business buys a building, its cost includes:
- the purchase price
- repair and remodeling costs
- unpaid taxes assumed by the purchaser
- legal costs
- real estate commissions paid
Determining the cost of constructing a new building is often more difficult. Usually, this cost includes architect’s fees, building permits, payments to contractors, and the cost of digging the foundation. Also included are labor and materials to build the building, salaries of officers supervising the construction, insurance, taxes, and interest during the construction period. Any miscellaneous amounts earned from the building during construction reduce the cost of the building. For example, an owner who could rent out a small, completed portion during construction of the remainder of the building would credit the rental proceeds to the Buildings account rather than to a revenue account.
Assume Spivey incurred the following costs between February 1 and June 30 in constructing the new factory:
Architect’s fee for the design of the building | 25,000 |
---|---|
Materials used to construct the building | 300,000 |
Labor to construct the building | 150,000 |
Interest cost on a construction loan for the building | 15,000 |
The total capitalizable cost of the building would be $490,000.
Cost of Equipment or Machinery
Often companies purchase machinery or other equipment, such as delivery or office equipment. Its cost includes:
- the seller’s net invoice price (whether the discount is taken or not)
- transportation charges incurred
- insurance in transit
- cost of installation
- costs of accessories
- testing costs
- any other costs needed to put the machine or equipment in operating condition in its intended location
The cost of machinery does not include removing and disposing of a replaced, old machine that has been used in operations. Such costs are part of the gain or loss on disposal of the old machine.
To illustrate, assume that on July 1, when Spivey Company moved into its new factory, rather than bring the old manufacturing equipment from the old location, it purchased new equipment with a down payment of $50,000. The base price for the new equipment was $150,000, but Spivey also paid brokerage fees of $5,000, legal fees of $2,000, and freight and insurance in transit of $3,000. In addition, the company paid $2,000 to a third party to install the new equipment. Spivey computed the cost of new equipment as follows:
Net purchase price | $150,000 |
---|---|
Brokerage fees | 5,000 |
Legal fees | 2,000 |
Freight and insurance in transit | 3,000 |
Installation costs | 2,000Single line |
Total Equipment cost | $162,000 |
Next, let’s look at how to journalize each of these transactions.
PRACTICE QUESTION
Candela Citations
- Determining Total Cost. Authored by: Joseph Cooke. Provided by: Lumen Learning. License: CC BY: Attribution
- Accounting Principles: A Business Perspective. Authored by: James Don Edwards, University of Georgia & Roger H. Hermanson, Georgia State University. Provided by: Endeavour International Corporation. Project: The Global Text Project. License: CC BY: Attribution
- Authored by: Michal Jarmoluk. Located at: https://pixabay.com/photos/money-bills-calculator-save-256312/. License: CC0: No Rights Reserved. License Terms: https://pixabay.com/service/terms/#license