Source Documents Notes
Source Documents Notes
Source Documents Notes
Source Documents
Accounting
When a business transaction occurs, a document known as the source document
captures the key data of the transaction. The source document describes the basic
facts of the transaction such as its date, purpose, and amount.
cash receipt
cancelled cheque
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Grade 8 EMS – Accounting / Source Documents 2014
The source document is the initial input to the accounting process and serves as
objective evidence of the transaction, serving as part of the audit trail should the firm
need to prove that a transaction occurred.
The source document may be created in either paper or electronic format. For
example, automated accounting systems may generate the source document
electronically or allow paper source documents to be scanned and converted into
electronic images. Accounting software often provides on-screen entry forms for
different types of transactions to capture the data and generate the source
document.
The source document is an early document in the accounting cycle. It provides the
information required to analyse and classify the transaction and to create the journal
entries; which is the next stage of the accounting cycle.
Each time a firm makes a financial transaction, some sort of paper trail is generated.
That paper trail is called a source document. If a small business writes a cheque out
of its account for office supplies, for example, the source document is the cheque
along with the receipt for office supplies.
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Grade 8 EMS – Accounting / Source Documents 2014
Keeping a source document for a business is just like keeping your receipts for tax-
deductible items for your personal taxes. You have to have those receipts in case
your taxes are audited. The same is true for your business, but you don't just keep
receipts for tax deductible expenses. You keep receipts (source documents) for
every financial transaction.
computer-generated receipt
credit memo for a customer refund
employee time card
deposit slip
purchase order
credit card receipts
cash register tape / roll [CRR]
purchase orders
deposit slips
notes for loans
payment stubs for interest
cash receipt
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Grade 8 EMS – Accounting / Source Documents 2014
You will have heard the term "double entry book-keeping". This is an old established
system of book-keeping which forms the basis of all accounting systems. Today, of
course, firms of all sizes usually use computerised accounting systems.
Nevertheless, it is useful to learn a little about the double entry system as this will
help you understand how a trial balance is drawn up.
The transaction is a business deal where goods are exchanged for money.
Below is the most common transaction related to the sale or purchase of goods,
services, capital items and consumables.
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Grade 8 EMS – Accounting / Source Documents 2014
When purchasing small quantities of consumables the document you will receive
could be the till receipt or cash register roll (CRR).
Study the following CRR and identify what the arrows indicate: -
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Features of an Invoice
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Grade 8 EMS – Accounting / Source Documents 2014
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Grade 8 EMS – Accounting / Source Documents 2014
Cheques: This document instructs the bank to withdraw money from your
personal account and pay it to another person. Once the payment
has been made, the cashed cheque is returned to you as proof that
payment has been made. The cheque counterfoil (stub) is a copy
of the information that serves as provisional proof of the transaction.
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Grade 8 EMS – Accounting / Source Documents 2014
Deposit slip
1. What is the name given to the bank that receives the money?
2. What information should be filled in on the deposit slip next to each of the
following numbers?
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
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Grade 8 EMS – Accounting / Source Documents 2014
Mr Smith purchases ten 100 kg bags of plain white flour from Mr Jones. The flour is
delivered the next day and Mr Smith checks a random sample to make sure that the
flour is acceptable. The next day he opens one of the bags and discovers that it
contains brown flour instead. After a check of all the bags Mr Smith realises that this
is the only bag of brown flour and he subsequently returns it. Mr. Smith needs the
extra bag of white flour for an order which is due out that day. Unfortunately, Mr.
Jones has no further bags of white flour in stock Because of this, Mr. Smith goes to
the cash and carry to buy the white flour necessary to complete the order. For this
transaction he pays by cash.
Question 1. What document does Mr Smith receive (and what copy) as a record of
the original transaction?
Question 2. What document does Mr. Jones retain (and what copy) as a record of
the return of the flour?
Question 3. What document does Mr. Smith receive as a record of his purchase of
flour at the cash and carry?
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