Errors and how to correct them
Despite our
attempts to maintain double entry and make sure that we do not make errors,
sometimes mistakes cannot be avoided. Therefore, we need strategies to correct
mistakes.
We can separate
errors into two types:
- · Errors revealed by an imbalance in the trial balance
- · Errors not revealed by the trial balance
We shall deal with
each type in turn:
| 
Errors revealed by an imbalance in the trial balance | ||||
| 
Type of error | 
Description | 
Correction | 
Example | |
| 
One-sided entry | 
Only one side of the double
  entry has been made in the ledger accounts e.g. the debit and not the credit | 
Make the missing entry and
  post the other side to the suspense account | 
Error 
£10 cash purchase only
  credited to cash 
Correction 
Dr Purchases £10 
Cr Suspense £10 | |
| 
Entry duplicated on one
  side, nothing on the other | 
Instead of posting a
  transaction as a debit in one account and a credit in another, both accounts
  are posted with debit entries, or both with credit entries. One account is
  correct but the other is out of balance by twice the amount of the posting | 
Post the account that was
  posted on the wrong side with twice the amount, and post the other side to
  suspense | 
Error 
£10 cash purchase credited
  to both cash and purchases 
Correction 
Dr Purchases £10 
Cr Suspense £20 | |
| 
Unequal entries normally
  caused by a transposition error | 
The correct amount is
  entered on one side, but there is an error in the writing in the other side
  of the entry. Often this is caused by a transposition error in the incorrect
  entry, where the digits in a number are transposed. If this is the only error
  in the accounts then the difference between the debits and credits will be
  divisible by 9 | 
In the account with the
  wrong posting, post an amount to bring the entry to the right amount, and
  post the other side to the suspense | 
Error 
£10 cash purchase debited to
  purchases as £100 (correct credit to cash) 
Correction 
Dr Suspense £90 
Cr Purchases £90 | |
| 
Account balance incorrectly
  transferred to the trial balance | 
This may be because of a
  calculation error when calculating the balance on a ledger account, or it may
  be that a balance which has been calculated correctly in the ledger is
  entered incorrectly to the trial balance | 
In the account with the
  wrong balance, post an amount to bring the balance to the right amount, and
  post the other side to suspense | 
Error 
£1,000 debit balance on
  purchases account written into trial balance as a£100 debit balance 
Correction 
Dr Purchases £900 
Cr Suspense £900 | |
| 
Balance omission | 
A balance on a general
  ledger account is omitted from the trial balance completely | 
Enter the missing balance on
  the correct side and enter the suspense account with the same amount on the
  other side | 
Error 
£1,000 debit balance on
  purchases account omitted 
Correction 
Dr Purchases on Trial
  Balance £1,000 
Cr Suspense on Trial Balance
  £1,000 | |
|  |  |  |  | |
| 
Errors not revealed by the trial balance |  | |||
| 
Type of error | 
Description | 
Correction | 
Example | |
| 
Error of principle | 
The double entry is
  arithmetically correct but the wrong type of account has been used (e.g. non-current
  asset debited with expenses) | 
Remove the incorrect entry
  and post it to the correct account | 
Error 
Motor expenses of £100 have
  been debited to the motor vehicles cost account 
Correction 
Dr Motor expenses £100 
Cr Motor vehicles cost £100 | |
| 
Error of original entry | 
Both the debit and credit
  entries have been made using the wrong amount because: 
·        
  The
  transaction was recorded in the book of prime entry at the incorrect amount,
  or 
·        
  The
  wrong figure was picked up from the primary record (e.g. a transposition was
  made), this figure was used to write up the book of prime entry and so to
  make both the debit and the credit entry | 
In both accounts, post an
  amount to bring the entry to the right amount | 
Error 
Motor expenses of £100 have
  been recorded as £10 in the purchases day book 
Correction 
Dr Motor expenses £90 
Cr PLCA £90 | |
| 
Error of omission | 
A transaction has been
  completely omitted from the ledger accounts | 
Make the appropriate posting | 
Error 
Cash purchases of £10 have
  not been corrected 
Correction 
Dr Purchases £10 
Cr Cash £10 | |
| 
Reversal of entries | 
The correct figure has been
  used and a debit and a credit entry made but the debit and the credit are on
  the wrong side of the respective accounts | 
Remove the incorrect entries
  and make the correct ones by posting the accounts correctly but with double
  the amount | 
Error 
Cash purchases of £10 have
  been debited to cash and credited to purchases 
Correction 
Dr Purchases £20 
Cr Cash £20 | |
| 
Error of commission | 
The double entry is
  arithmetically correct but the wrong account of the same type has been used
  (e.g. a phone expense is debited to the electricity account rather than the
  telephone account  | 
Remove the incorrect entry
  and post it to the correct account | 
Error 
Motor expenses of £100 have
  been debited to the office expenses account 
Correction 
Dr Motor expenses £100 
Cr Office expenses £100 | |
What does this mean for the trial
balance?
Before we
can proceed to find the error(s), we should now create a Suspense account to
hold the error until such time as we are able to clear it.
|  | 
Trial Balance |  |  |  | 
Suspense Account |  | ||
| 
Total Debits | 
190,467 | 
Total Credits | 
191,996 |  | 
Trial Balance | 
1,529 |  |  | 
| 
Suspense account | 
1,529 |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 
|  | 
191,996 |  | 
191,996 |  |  |  |  |  | 
|  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  |  | 
If we draw
up a trial balance and it does not balance we have to have a procedure to find
errors:
1)     
Check your totalling of both columns (debit and
credit) – it is very easy to enter the wrong number on your calculator
2)     
Calculate the difference between the two
columns. This may reveal the error straight away. Divide the difference by 9,
if it works out to a whole number, your error could be in a transposition of
figures.
3)     
Check that each account balance has been brought
into the trial balance correctly.
4)     
Ensure all balances from the
main/nominal/general ledger have been brought into the trial balance and that
the cash and bank balances are on the correct side of the trial balance.
5)     
Check your balancing of each T-account.
6)     
Look in each t-account for an amount that is the
same as the difference you are looking for.
7)     
Look in the ledger accounts for a figure that is
exactly half of the difference in the trial balance. If you find one, check
that the double entry has been carried out correctly for this transaction.
8)     
If all else fails, check that all of your double
entry has been carried out correctly.
Clearing the Suspense Account
Using the
example from earlier, we will now proceed to clear the suspense account.
After
finding that the trial balance did not balance and having created a suspense
account to hold the difference, we have now found the following errors:
a)     
Payments for motor expenses of £350 were
correctly recorded in the cash payments book, but credited to the motor
expenses account.
b)     
Payment for postage of £67 was correctly
recorded in the cash payments book but entered into the postage account as £76.
c)      
An invoice (including VAT) for £470 was omitted
from the sales day book.
d)     
When the discounts allowed account was balanced
the balance was undercast by £100.
e)     
Cleaning costs of £240 were included in the cash
payments book, but were not posted to the cleaning costs account.
f)      
The balance from the miscellaneous expenses
account of £498 was omitted from the trial balance.
Solution
We have our
Suspense account in place, so now we can deal with each error in turn:
a)      Double entry that has taken place
Cr            Bank                                                      £350
Cr
           Motor Expenses                                               £350
To correct
this we have to reverse the error, and then make the correct entry:
Dr           Motor Expenses                               £700 (2 x £350)
Cr            Suspense                                             £700
b)      Error is £9 (£9 too much in the postages
account) so we have to reduce the postages account by £9:
Dr           Suspense                                             £9
Cr            Postage                                                               £9
c)       This error has no impact on the trial
balance but we must still record the sale:
Dr           SLCA                                                      £470
Cr            Sales                                                      £400
Cr            VAT                                                        £70
d)      Undercast means that we have calculated a
balance that is too small.
Dr           Discounts Allowed                           £100
Cr            Suspense                                             £100
e)      The cleaning costs have not been recorde3d
in the cleaning expenses account, so we must now record them.
Dr           Cleaning Costs                                  £240
Cr            Suspense                                             £240
f)       The £498 balance from the Miscellaneous
Expenses account was omitted from the trial balance so we must now include it a
sit should have been originally:
Dr           Miscellaneous Expenses                                £498
Cr            Suspense                                             £498
Our Suspense
T-account should now be completed to ensure that it has been cleared (i.e.
there is no remaining balance left on the account):
Sometimes we
may be unsure where to post an amount so we can create the Suspense Account to
hold the amount until we establish where we should be posting it.
E.g.        a
purchase of a special part for a machine valued at £700, paid by cheque.
                Dr           Suspense                                             £700
(Because
we do not know whether to debit the machine account [Asset] or maintenance
account [expense])
Cr
           Bank                                                      £700
Later,
we find that we should have posted the debit entry to the machinery maintenance
account so:
Dr           Machinery Maintenance              £700
Cr            Suspense                                             £700
