Performing Specific Procedures to Obtain Evidence -- Other Procedures Flashcards
An auditor traced a sample of purchase orders and the related receiving reports to the purchases journal and the cash disbursements journal. The purpose of this substantive audit procedure most likely was to
A. Identify unusually large purchases that should be investigated further
B. Verify that cash disbursements were for goods actually received
C. Determine that purchases were properly recorded
D. Test whether payments were for goods actually ordered
C.
Tracing a sample of purchase orders and the related receiving reports to the purchases journal and the cash disbursements journal provides evidence to determine that purchases were properly recorded. Although during this audit procedure the auditor might identify unusually large purchases that should be investigated further, this would not be the prevailing purpose of this substantive audit procedure. To verify that cash disbursements were for goods actually received would require vouching from the cash disbursements journal to the receiving reports. To test whether payments were for goods actually ordered would require vouching from the cash disbursements journal to the purchase orders.
An auditor most likely would extend substantive tests of payroll when
A. Payroll is extensively audited by the state government.
B. Payroll expense is substantially higher than in the prior year.
C. Overpayments are discovered in performing tests of details.
D. Employees complain to management about too much overtime.
C.
Finding overpayments while performing tests of details may cause the auditor to increase the assessed risk of material misstatement. Generally, as the risk of material misstatement increases, the acceptable level of detection risk decreases; this means, the extent of substantive procedures must increase. Answers (A), (B), and (D) do not necessarily increase the risk of material misstatement.
Cooper, CPA, performs a test to determine whether all merchandise for which the client was billed was received. The population for this test consists of all
A. Merchandise received
B. Vendors’ invoices
C. Receiving reports
D. Canceled checks
B.
The objective of the auditor’s test is to determine whether all merchandise for which the client was billed was received. The population for this test consists of all vendor’s invoices. The auditor would select a sample of vendor’s invoices and then trace them to supporting receiving reports to assure that the merchandise for which the client was billed was received.
A weakness of internal control over recording retirements of equipment may cause an auditor to
A. Inspect certain items of equipment in the plant and trace those items to the accounting records.
B. Review the subsidiary ledger to ascertain whether depreciation was taken on each item of equipment during the year.
C. Trace additions to the “other assets” account to search for equipment that is still on hand but no longer being used.
D. Select certain items of equipment from the accounting records and locate them in the plant.
D is corrent because testing from the population of asset accounting records to certain pieces of equipment in the plant will provide assurance that recorded assets are being used by the company. If the auditor finds that recorded assets are no longer in use, there would appear to be a problem recording retirements of assets.
C is incorrect because the question addresses unrecorded equipment retirements, not retirements of assets still on hand that have been reclassified as “other assets.”
B is incorrect because reviewing depreciation of property, plant, and equipment does not directly address the question of unrecorded retirement.
A is incorrect because testing from a population of equipment on hand and tracing to the accounting records assures that equipment on hand has been recorded but does not provide assurance that all equipment retired has been recorded.
An auditor decides to perform substantive tests on a client’s property and equipment balance as of an interim date. The auditor has not obtained evidence about the operating effectiveness of relevant controls. What additional work must be performed to extend the audit conclusions from the interim date to the balance sheet date?
A. Tests of controls for the period between the beginning of the fiscal year and the interim date.
B. Tests of controls for the period between the interim date and the balance sheet date.
C. Substantive procedures for the period between the interim date and the balance sheet date.
D. Analytical comparison of the current-year interim balance with the prior-year interim balance.
The correct answer is (C).
Since the auditor has not obtained evidence about the operating effectiveness of relevant controls for the interim period and has performed substantive tests on the property and equipment balance as of the interim date, the additional work performed to extend the audit conclusions from the interim date to the balance sheet date would be to perform substantive procedures for the period between the interim date and the balance sheet date.
An auditor’s principal objective in analyzing repairs and maintenance expense accounts is to
A. Determine that all obsolete property, plant, and equipment assets were written off before the year-end
B. Verify that all recorded property, plant, and equipment assets actually exist
C. Discover expenditures that were expensed but should have been capitalized
D. Identify property, plant and equipment assets that cannot be repaired and should be written off
C.
By reviewing the repairs and maintenance expense accounts, an auditor may uncover transactions that involve assets that should be capitalized rather than expensed. The repairs and maintenance expense accounts are not involved in the write-off of obsolete assets. Property, plant, and equipment (PP&E) that cannot be repaired would not tend to involve transactions in the repairs and maintenance expense accounts either. To verify that all recorded PP&E assets exist, an auditor would tend to inspect the assets themselves against the listings in the PP&E accounts, rather than review expense accounts.
In performing tests concerning the granting of stock options, an auditor should
A. Confirm the transaction with the Secretary of State in the state of incorporation
B. Verify the existence of option holders in the entity’s payroll records or stock ledgers
C. Determine that sufficient treasury stock is available to cover any new stock issued
D. Trace the authorization for the transaction to a vote of the board of directors
D.
One of the primary objectives in testing related to Stockholder’s Equity and Capital accounts is to verify that capital transactions are appropriately authorized and approved. The granting of stock options would require board of director approval because it could affect the number of shares outstanding.
An auditor most likely would review an entity’s periodic accounting for the numerical sequence of shipping documents and invoices to support management’s financial statement assertion of
A. Occurrence
B. Rights and obligations
C. Valuation and allocation
D. Completeness
D.
Assertions about completeness deal with whether all transactions, accounts, and disclosures that should be presented in the financial statements are included. Periodically accounting for the numerical sequence of documents and invoices helps ensure that all entries affecting those accounts have been recognized and posted. Answer (a) deals with whether recorded transactions have actually occurred and pertain to the entity. Answer (b) deals with whether assets are the rights of the entity and liabilities are the obligations of the entity. Answer (c) deals with whether assets, liabilities, and equity interests have been included in the financial statements at appropriate amounts.
In evaluating the adequacy of the allowance for doubtful accounts, an auditor most likely reviews the entity’s aging of receivables to support management’s financial statement assertion of
A. Existence
B. Valuation and allocation
C. Completeness
D. Rights and obligations
B.
Valuation and allocation is the assertion that assets, liabilities, and equity interests are included in the financial statements at appropriate amounts and any resulting valuation or allocation adjustments are appropriately recorded. Answer (a) deals with whether assets, liabilities, or equity interests exist at a given date. Answer (c) deals with whether all transactions, accounts, and disclosures that should be presented in the financial statements are so included. Answer (d) deals with whether assets are the rights of the entity and liabilities are the obligations of the entity.
Which of the following most likely would be detected by an auditor’s review of a client’s sales cutoff?
A. Shipments lacking sales invoices and shipping documents
B. Excessive write-offs of accounts receivable
C. Unrecorded sales at year-end
D. Lapping of year-end accounts receivable
C.
In general, cutoff tests are used to detect unrecorded transactions at the end of the period. In this question, the auditor would most likely detect unrecorded sales for the year by reviewing cutoff sales to determine that sales were recorded in the period in which title to the goods passed to the customer. Such a review would not reveal shipments lacking invoices, excessive write-offs of accounts receivable, or lapping of year-end accounts receivable.
In testing the existence assertion for an asset, an auditor ordinarily works from the
A. Financial statements to the potentially unrecorded items
B. Potentially unrecorded items to the financial statements
C. Accounting records to the supporting evidence
D. Supporting evidence to the accounting records
C.
In testing the existence assertion for an asset, the auditor would start with the accounting records themselves to determine that the assets recorded on the client’s books do exist. Further evidence of the asset existence would then be found in the supporting evidence.
Editor’s note: The key word in this question is “assertion”. When testing assertion, you wouldn’t necessarily go to/from the financial statements, but rather drill-down to a more specific level, such as going from the accounting records to the supporting evidence.
If the objective of an auditor’s test of details is to detect a possible understatement of sales, the auditor most likely would trace transactions from the
A. Sales invoices to the shipping documents
B. Cash receipts journal to the sales journal
C. Shipping documents to the sales invoices
D. Sales journal to the cash receipts journal
C.
To discover understated (unrecorded) sales, the auditor would most likely trace transactions from shipping documents to sales invoices. This would reveal orders that have been shipped, but not billed and is an example of testing for completeness. Vouching from sales invoices to shipping documents (the opposite direction) is a test to substantiate that sales are not overstated (verify their occurrence or existence). Comparing entries between the cash receipts journal and the sales journal would verify that the entries were posted correctly, but it would not locate an unrecorded sale.
Editor Note: The sales and cash receipts journals are often combined in one journal.
In auditing a client’s retained earnings account, an auditor should determine whether there are any restrictions on retained earnings that result from loans, agreements, or state law. This procedure is designed to corroborate management’s financial statement assertion of
A. Valuation and allocation
B. Occurrence
C. Completeness of disclosures
D. Rights and obligations
D.
Restrictions on retained earnings should be disclosed in the financial statements. Restrictions would not impact the valuation, allocation, or occurrence of retained earnings. Rights and obligations pertain to assets and liabilities, not retained earnings.
Which of the following procedures would be most appropriate for testing the completeness assertion as it applies to inventory?
A. Scanning perpetual inventory, production, and purchasing records
B. Examining paid vendor invoices
C. Tracing inventory items from the tag listing back to the physical inventory quantities
D. Performing cutoff procedures for shipping and receiving
D.
Performing cutoff procedures for shipping and receiving would be the best test for the completeness assertion as it applies to inventory. The completeness assertion means that all transactions that should have been recorded have been recorded. Many procedures test multiple assertions, so candidates must select the best answer—some of the other answers are better tests of other assertions. Scanning perpetual inventory, production, and purchasing records test accuracy. Examining paid vendor invoices tests accuracy and occurrence. Tracing inventory items from the tag listing back to the physical inventory quantities tests accuracy and existence.
An auditor usually obtains evidence of stockholders’ equity transactions by reviewing the entity’s
A. Minutes of board of directors meetings
B. Transfer agent’s records
C. Canceled stock certificates
D. Treasury stock certificate book
A.
One of the auditor’s objectives in the examination of owners’ equity is to determine that all transactions during the year affecting owners’ equity accounts were properly authorized and recorded. In the case of a corporation, changes in capital stock accounts should receive formal advance approval by the board of directors. A transfer agent’s records show detail about the owners of the stock, and do not focus on the total outstanding. Canceled stock certificates and a treasury stock certificate book are less reliable than the minutes, as they would be updated only after the transaction is complete.