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MONTHLY
AND YEARLY FUNCTIONS
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Balances
Print a System/File Balance report
every day that you post. You should
also print it following a system
error or hardware failure.
Reconciling
financial reports
Most people print and reconcile
certain financial reports at month-end
and year-end. These General Ledger
reports include:
| Report
|
Description
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| Trial
Balance |
Shows
the opening balance for each
account, the net change as
a result of the transactions
posted to the account during
the current month, and the
closing balance. The final
total at the end should be
zero, indicating that your
General Ledger is balanced.
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| Operating
Statement |
Lists
revenue and expense accounts
and displays the net amount
of transactions posted in
the current month, the monthly
budget amount assigned to
the account and the difference
between the two. It also lists
the net amount posted for
the year to date, the total
of all monthly budget amounts
since year-end and the difference
between the two. Amounts in
revenue accounts are normally
a negative number and amounts
in expense accounts are normally
a positive number. |
| Balance
Sheet |
Lists
your asset, liability and
equity accounts and displays
the net amount of transactions
posted in the current year,
the net amount of transactions
posted in the previous year
and the difference between
the two for each account.
If your General Ledger is
in balance, the Total Assets
amount and the Total Liabilities
& Equity amount will be the
same. |
| Detail
Journal Listing |
Shows each transaction posted
to a General Ledger account,
along with the reference number
entered when the transaction
was posted, the audit number,
the date, the posting program
used to generate the transaction,
and the description entered
when the transaction was posted.
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Your
accountant might require additional
reports. Normally these reports
should be printed for the date
range representing the month you
are reconciling.
Sub
ledgers
In addition to reconciling financial
reports, you will also need to
ensure the totals of your Client
sub ledgers agree with your General
Ledger. The reports listed below
should agree with your General
Ledger balances for the control
accounts work in progress (WIP)
Fees, WIP Expenses, Accounts Receivable
Fees, and Accounts Receivable
Expenses and with your Trust accounts.
These are general guidelines only.
Depending on your accounting method,
some of these control accounts
might not apply to your firm.
Client,
WIP and A/R reports don't include
balances on Client Files that
have been closed and so cannot
be regenerated for a prior period
if you have closed Client Files.
Lawyer and Trust reports do include
balances on closed Files.
-
Client Listings (Clients report)
- Matter
Summary by Lawyer (Billing report)
-
WIP Listing (Billing report)
- A/R
Aging (Receipts report)
- Client
Listing by Trust Bank (Trust
report)
For example, the total of your
A/R Aging report (which is based
on Client sub ledger data) printed
as of the current date should
agree with the total of the General
Ledger control accounts, Accounts
Receivable Fees, and Accounts
Receivable Expenses as of the
current date.
Lawyer
and File Type reports
The primary distinction between
reports is that some include system
to date balances - meaning that
year-end balances are carried
forward - and some don't. These
Billing reports include year to
date balances:
-
Lawyer Activity and "by Lawyer"
reports
- Summary
by File Type and "by File Type"
reports
On
year to date reports, balances
from the prior year are not carried
forward when you do a year-end.
The table below lists each category
typically included on these reports
along with the corresponding General
Ledger accounts that it should
reconcile to. Also listed are
the transaction types that will
affect these totals. (These reports
do include balances on Client
Files that have been closed and
so can be regenerated for a prior
period if you have closed Client
Files.)
| Category
on report |
G/L
Account |
Transaction
types |
| Fees
Billed |
A/R
Fees; Billed Fees Revenue
|
Billing
|
| Expenses
Billed |
A/R
Expenses |
Billing |
| Fee
Receipts |
A/R
Fees |
Firm
receipts |
| Expense
Receipts |
A/R Expenses |
Firm
receipts |
| Fee
write-offs |
WIP
Fees; Fee Write-offs expense
account |
Time
Write-offs; Reverse Time Write-offs
|
| Expense
write-offs |
WIP Expenses; Expense Write-offs
expense account |
Expenses
Write-offs; Reverse Expenses
Write-offs |
| A/R
Fee write-offs |
A/R Fees; A/R Fees Write-offs
expense account |
A/R
Fees Write-offs |
Utilities
In addition to printing and reconciling
reports to ensure your data is
valid, also run Amicus Accounting's
utility programs on a regular
basis. This helps improve performance
and avoid potential problems.
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Yes.
You can print financial reports
for the current year and for the
prior year. Choose General Ledger,
General Ledger Reports, and select
the report you want to print.
In the Report Year fields, enter
the date range corresponding to
your previous financial year.
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Yes.
Amicus Accounting's reports are
date sensitive, enabling you to
print reports from previous months
if required. However, you cannot
backdate Client or Accounts Receivable
reports if you have closed Files.
Also, you cannot backdate WIP
reports if you have posted billings,
even if the fee bills were posted
after the report date.
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Posting
functions enable you to post into
your prior financial year to make
adjustments. .
Remember
that entries posted to your prior
year will change your prior year
closing amounts. You will need
to reprint your year-end reports
in order for them to accurately
reflect your year-end figures.
This also applies if you post
entries to a prior month - you
will need to reprint your month-end
reports because they will not
be accurate after you have posted
into a prior period .
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No.
You cannot post into the next year
until you have run the year-end
program. You can post adjusting
entries to the prior year at any
point, so you don't have to wait
for your accountant to give you
your adjusting entries before doing
the year-end. |
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Yes.
Most people don't receive their
bank statements until well into
the next month. You don't need
to wait to reconcile your banks
before you start posting in the
next month. The Outstanding Check
List and the Bank Reconciliation
Worksheet and most other Amicus
Accounting reports and functions
are date sensitive, so you can
post adjustments and print reports
for prior periods at any time.
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Yes.
You can post using any date in
the current year or in the prior
year. Amicus Accounting warns
you if you post into a month that
is not your current posting month,
and it also warns you if you enter
a date that is more than 30 days
before or after the current date.
However, these are only warning
messages to prevent accidental
postings to dates outside the
current month; you can override
them if you wish.
Remember
that if you print your month-end
reports and then post into a prior
month, you will need to reprint
your month-end reports. Amicus
Accounting's reports are date
sensitive, so you can print reports
from previous months if required.
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Posting
programs allow you to post directly
into your prior year using a date
in the prior year.
You
can post to your previous financial
year and you can print G/L reports
for your previous financial year.
To post to the prior year, you
must first create a password.
-
Choose Start Up, Firm Settings.
- Click
the Tax Settings tab and click
Edit.
- Enter
a password of your choosing
in the Previous Year Adjustments
Password field. Your password
must be between 6 and 8 characters
in length.
- Click
Save.
After creating a password, post
the previous year adjustments
in the posting programs by entering
the prior year date. Normally
you will use the last day of your
prior financial year. For example,
if your financial year is January
to December, enter December 31
of the prior year as the date.
This will adjust the opening balance
of your current year. When prompted,
enter your Previous Year Adjustments
password. Remember that if you
post into your prior year, you
must re-print your year-end reports.
Note:
The Previous Year Adjustments
password is good for one day only.
Therefore, if you need to post
more entries at a later date,
you must return to Firm Settings
and re-enter your password. You
can enter the same password again,
but you must reset it on each
day that you intend to post to
your prior year.
Journal
entries posted to revenue and
expense accounts in the prior
year automatically update your
retained earnings control account
opening balance for the current
year. Journal entries posted to
asset and liability accounts in
the prior year update the asset
and liability account opening
balances for the new operating
year.
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TThe
System Balance report checks for
two things:
- Do
the totals for the General Ledger
control accounts equal the totals
for the Client sub ledgers?
Control accounts are General
Ledger accounts in your Chart
of Accounts that are used to
reconcile your General Ledger
to your Client sub ledgers.
Posting programs affect the
General Ledger control accounts
and must update one or more
Client Files and the General
Ledger by an equal amount or
your System Balance will be
out of balance. If an error
occurs in the system, either
the General Ledger or the Client
sub ledgers might not be updated
correctly. If this happens,
the System Balance will report
an out of balance. Posting journal
entries to control accounts
will also cause your system
to go out of balance because
journal entries don't affect
Client Files. Amicus Accounting
will warn you if you try to
post a journal entry to a control
account.
- Do
the debits in the General Ledger
equal the credits? If the debits
in your General Ledger don't
equal the credits, the System
Balance report will print a
line saying G/L not balanced
and will indicate the amount
of the difference. Errors occurring
while posting can cause this.
Posting half journal entries
can also cause this - if you
post a half journal entry when
your General Ledger is in balance,
you will cause it to go out
of balance.
The
File Balance report displays the
status of your Client Files. Amicus
Accounting calculates the balance
on a Client File using two methods:
it totals the posting details
on the Client File, and it stores
a master balance on the File.
If these balances don't agree,
the Client File number will display
on your File Balance report. Typical
causes of Client Files appearing
on your File Balance report are
hardware failures and system errors.
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The
year-end function makes a copy
of your General Ledger transaction
details and increments your current
financial year start and end dates.
The financial year date range
is set in the Firm Settings screen
and is used, similar to the default
posting month, by posting programs,
by reports and by the year-end
function itself. Run the year-end
function when you are ready to
start posting into the next financial
year.
The
year-end function makes a copy
of your G/L transaction details
and adds one year to your current
financial year date range. Your
financial year date range is set
in the Firm Settings function
and is used, similar to the default
posting month, by posting functions
, by reports and by the year-end
function itself.
You
will be unable to post into the
next year until you have run the
year-end, but you are able to
post into the previous year -
most posting functions enable
you to post directly into the
previous year by providing a password
after entering a date falling
within the range of your previous
financial year. The password is
to prevent postings accidentally
entered into the previous year.
Year-end
procedures include the daily work
such as adding new Client Files,
posting transactions, performing
a backup, printing transaction
audits, and printing the System/File
Balance reports, as well as specific
year-end steps such as printing
reports. If you post your transactions
on a regular basis, the year-end
steps can be completed quickly
and easily.
You will be unable to post into
the next fiscal year until you
complete the year-end procedures
for the current year.
Use
this list as a guideline only
- review these steps and customize
your procedures to suit your firm.
- Ensure
all posting for the year is
complete. You can post to the
prior year if adjustments are
necessary after completing the
year-end, but if you do so you
will need to re-print your year-end
reports.
-
Post adjusting journal entries,
including bank adjustments if
necessary.
- Print
the System/File Balance reports.
If your system is out of balance,
read the Help topic: Tips for
using Amicus Accounting > General
> What to do if your System
Balance is out of balance. If
there are Client Files listed
on your File Balance, read the
Help topic: What to do if there
is a Client File on your File
Balance report.
- After
you have ensured your system
is in balance, print your year-end
reports. View a list of recommended
reports.
- Print
all unprinted transaction audits.
- Do
a backup.
- Choose
Month/Year End, Year-End.
- Enter
the year-end date and confirm
that the financial year start
and end dates accurately reflect
the date range of your new financial
year.
- Enter
the password DOYEAREND and click
Proceed.
- Set
your new default posting month.
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This
topic lists the recommended steps
for completing a month-end using
Amicus Accounting. Month-end procedures
include the daily work such as
adding new Client Files, posting
transactions, performing a backup,
printing transaction audits, and
printing the System/File Balance
reports, as well as specific month-end
steps such as printing reports.
Use
this list as a guideline only
- review these steps and customize
your procedures to suit your firm.
- Ensure
all posting for the month is
complete. You can post to a
prior month if adjustments are
necessary after completing a
month-end, but if you do so
you will also need to re-print
your month-end reports.
- Post
adjusting journal entries, including
bank adjustments if necessary.
- Print
the System/File Balance reports.
If your system is out of balance,
read the Help topic: Tips for
using Amicus Accounting > General
> What to do if your System
Balance is out of balance. If
there are Client Files listed
on your File Balance report,
read the Help topic: What to
do if there is a Client File
on your File Balance report.
- After
you have ensured your system
is in balance, print your month-end
reports. View a list of recommended
month-end reports.
- Print
all unprinted transaction audits.
- Do
a backup.
- Set
your new default posting month.
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Set
your default posting month to be
the month in which you are currently
doing the majority of your posting.
The month that is set as the default
will determine when Amicus Accounting
will display the message that the
date entered is not within your
default posting month. For example,
if it is currently October but you
are finishing September postings
with only the occasional October
entry, set the default month to
September so you don't continually
receive messages that the date is
outside the default month. Set the
default month to October once the
majority of your posting is for
October. |
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