On January 1, 2019, Monica Company acquired 70 percent of Young Company’s outstanding common stock for $756,000. The fair value of the noncontrolling interest at the acquisition date was $324,000.   Young reported stockholders’ equity accounts on that date as follows:           Common stock—$10 par value $ 300,000   Additional paid-in capital   40,000   Retained earnings   600,000       In establishing the acquisition value, Monica appraised Young's assets and ascertained that the accounting records undervalued a building (with a five-year remaining life) by $60,000. Any remaining excess acquisition-date fair value was allocated to a franchise agreement to be amortized over 10 years.   During the subsequent years, Young sold Monica inventory at a 20 percent gross profit rate. Monica consistently resold this merchandise in the year of acquisition or in the period immediately following. Transfers for the three years after this business combination was created amounted to the following:   Year Transfer Price Inventory Remaining at Year-End (at transfer price) 2019 $ 70,000   $ 29,000   2020   90,000     31,000   2021   100,000     37,000       In addition, Monica sold Young several pieces of fully depreciated equipment on January 1, 2020, for $55,000. The equipment had originally cost Monica $88,000. Young plans to depreciate these assets over a five-year period.   In 2021, Young earns a net income of $170,000 and declares and pays $50,000 in cash dividends. These figures increase the subsidiary's Retained Earnings to a $930,000 balance at the end of 2021. During this same year, Monica reported dividend income of $35,000 and an investment account containing the initial value balance of $756,000. No changes in Young's common stock accounts have occurred since Monica's acquisition. Compute the net income attributable to the noncontrolling interest for 2021.

Intermediate Accounting: Reporting And Analysis
3rd Edition
ISBN:9781337788281
Author:James M. Wahlen, Jefferson P. Jones, Donald Pagach
Publisher:James M. Wahlen, Jefferson P. Jones, Donald Pagach
Chapter13: Investments And Long-term Receivables
Section: Chapter Questions
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On January 1, 2019, Monica Company acquired 70 percent of Young Company’s outstanding common stock for $756,000. The fair value of the noncontrolling interest at the acquisition date was $324,000.

 

Young reported stockholders’ equity accounts on that date as follows:

 

       
Common stock—$10 par value $ 300,000  
Additional paid-in capital   40,000  
Retained earnings   600,000  
 

 

In establishing the acquisition value, Monica appraised Young's assets and ascertained that the accounting records undervalued a building (with a five-year remaining life) by $60,000. Any remaining excess acquisition-date fair value was allocated to a franchise agreement to be amortized over 10 years.

 

During the subsequent years, Young sold Monica inventory at a 20 percent gross profit rate. Monica consistently resold this merchandise in the year of acquisition or in the period immediately following. Transfers for the three years after this business combination was created amounted to the following:

 

Year Transfer Price Inventory Remaining
at Year-End
(at transfer price)
2019 $ 70,000   $ 29,000  
2020   90,000     31,000  
2021   100,000     37,000  
 

 

In addition, Monica sold Young several pieces of fully depreciated equipment on January 1, 2020, for $55,000. The equipment had originally cost Monica $88,000. Young plans to depreciate these assets over a five-year period.

 

In 2021, Young earns a net income of $170,000 and declares and pays $50,000 in cash dividends. These figures increase the subsidiary's Retained Earnings to a $930,000 balance at the end of 2021. During this same year, Monica reported dividend income of $35,000 and an investment account containing the initial value balance of $756,000. No changes in Young's common stock accounts have occurred since Monica's acquisition.

Compute the net income attributable to the noncontrolling interest for 2021.

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