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National Bank has several departments that occupy both floors of a two-story bui

ID: 2520655 • Letter: N

Question

National Bank has several departments that occupy both floors of a two-story building. The departmental accounting system has a single account, Building Occupancy Cost, in its ledger. The types and amounts of occupancy costs recorded in this account for the current period follow.   
Depreciation—Building
$
31,500

Interest—Building mortgage

47,250

Taxes—Building and land

14,000

Gas (heating) expense

4,375

Lighting expense

5,250

Maintenance expense

9,625

Total occupancy cost
$
112,000



The building has 7,000 square feet on each floor. In prior periods, the accounting manager merely divided the $112,000 occupancy cost by 14,000 square feet to find an average cost of $8 per square foot and then charged each department a building occupancy cost equal to this rate times the number of square feet that it occupied. Diane Linder manages a first-floor department that occupies 1,000 square feet, and Juan Chiro manages a second-floor department that occupies 1,700 square feet of floor space. In discussing the departmental reports, the second-floor manager questions whether using the same rate per square foot for all departments makes sense because the first-floor space is more valuable. This manager also references a recent real estate study of average local rental costs for similar space that shows first-floor space worth $40 per square foot and second-floor space worth $10 per square foot (excluding costs for heating, lighting, and maintenance). 2. Allocate the depreciation, interest, and taxes occupancy costs to the Linder and Chiro departments in proportion to the relative market values of the floor space. Allocate the heating, lighting, and maintenance costs to the Linder and Chiro departments in proportion to the square feet occupied (ignoring floor space market values). (Round cost answers to 2 decimal places. Round your intermediate calculations to 2 decimal places.) National Bank has several departments that occupy both floors of a two-story building. The departmental accounting system has a single account, Building Occupancy Cost, in its ledger. The types and amounts of occupancy costs recorded in this account for the current period follow.   
Depreciation—Building
$
31,500

Interest—Building mortgage

47,250

Taxes—Building and land

14,000

Gas (heating) expense

4,375

Lighting expense

5,250

Maintenance expense

9,625

Total occupancy cost
$
112,000



The building has 7,000 square feet on each floor. In prior periods, the accounting manager merely divided the $112,000 occupancy cost by 14,000 square feet to find an average cost of $8 per square foot and then charged each department a building occupancy cost equal to this rate times the number of square feet that it occupied. Diane Linder manages a first-floor department that occupies 1,000 square feet, and Juan Chiro manages a second-floor department that occupies 1,700 square feet of floor space. In discussing the departmental reports, the second-floor manager questions whether using the same rate per square foot for all departments makes sense because the first-floor space is more valuable. This manager also references a recent real estate study of average local rental costs for similar space that shows first-floor space worth $40 per square foot and second-floor space worth $10 per square foot (excluding costs for heating, lighting, and maintenance). 2. Allocate the depreciation, interest, and taxes occupancy costs to the Linder and Chiro departments in proportion to the relative market values of the floor space. Allocate the heating, lighting, and maintenance costs to the Linder and Chiro departments in proportion to the square feet occupied (ignoring floor space market values). (Round cost answers to 2 decimal places. Round your intermediate calculations to 2 decimal places.) National Bank has several departments that occupy both floors of a two-story building. The departmental accounting system has a single account, Building Occupancy Cost, in its ledger. The types and amounts of occupancy costs recorded in this account for the current period follow.   
Depreciation—Building
$
31,500

Interest—Building mortgage

47,250

Taxes—Building and land

14,000

Gas (heating) expense

4,375

Lighting expense

5,250

Maintenance expense

9,625

Total occupancy cost
$
112,000



The building has 7,000 square feet on each floor. In prior periods, the accounting manager merely divided the $112,000 occupancy cost by 14,000 square feet to find an average cost of $8 per square foot and then charged each department a building occupancy cost equal to this rate times the number of square feet that it occupied. Diane Linder manages a first-floor department that occupies 1,000 square feet, and Juan Chiro manages a second-floor department that occupies 1,700 square feet of floor space. In discussing the departmental reports, the second-floor manager questions whether using the same rate per square foot for all departments makes sense because the first-floor space is more valuable. This manager also references a recent real estate study of average local rental costs for similar space that shows first-floor space worth $40 per square foot and second-floor space worth $10 per square foot (excluding costs for heating, lighting, and maintenance). 2. Allocate the depreciation, interest, and taxes occupancy costs to the Linder and Chiro departments in proportion to the relative market values of the floor space. Allocate the heating, lighting, and maintenance costs to the Linder and Chiro departments in proportion to the square feet occupied (ignoring floor space market values). (Round cost answers to 2 decimal places. Round your intermediate calculations to 2 decimal places.)

Explanation / Answer

Fixed cost for first floor = ((31500+47250+14000)*4/5)/7000=10.60

(fixed expenses in proportion of market value)

Variable expense =(4375+5250+9625)/14000=1.38

(variable expenses according to total square feet)

Total rate of first floor =10.60+1.38=11.98

Fixed cost for second floor =((31500+47250+14000)*1/5))/7000=2.14

Variable cost for second floor =(4375+5250+9625)/14000=1.38

Total rate for second floor =2.14+1.38=3.52

Department square footage rate total Linder's department 1000 11.98 11980 Chiro's department 1700 3.52 5984
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