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Fundamentals
of Auditing ACC 311
VU
Lesson
33
VERIFICATION
OF ASSETS
VOUCHING
= Inspection of supporting documents and
records.
VERIFICATION
= Inspection, Observation, Enquiry, Computation,
Analysis
A
large part of the final audit
stage will be taken up with
the verification of the
assets and liabilities
appearing
in the
balance sheet. There are
well established techniques for
verifying specific assets
and liabilities.
Following
few lectures will cover
verification of assets, liabilities and
equity.
Verification
of Assets
Auditor
has a duty to verify all the
assets appearing on the balance
sheet and also a duty to
verify that there
are
no other
assets which ought to appear on the
balance sheet.
Following
aspects of assets must be
verified:
1.
Cost
2.
Authorization
3.
Value
4.
Existence
5.
Beneficial Ownership
6.
Presentation in the
accounts
These
aspects can be remembered by
the mnemonic CAVE
BOP.
While
verifying assets at a balance
sheet date, it is possible to
divide the assets into two
classes:
1.
Those acquired during the
year under review.
2.
Those held at the date of
the previous balance
sheet.
For
the assets acquired during
the year it will be
necessary to vouch
their
acquisition. For this
purpose cost
and
authorization
aspects
are verified.
For
the assets held at the beginning of the year,
the acquisition would have
been dealt within a previous
year.
The other
aspects like value,
existence, beneficial ownership,
and presentation in financial
statements are verified in
this
regard.
Of course, these need to be
consistent
with
the previous years.
Verification
Methods:
a.
Make
or request from client's
staff a schedule
of
each asset. This schedule
will show the
following and
suggest
the associated verification
procedures:
i.
Opening
balance
a.
Verify by reference to previous
year's balance sheet and
audit files,
ii.
Acquisitions
b.
Vouch the cost with
documentary evidence e.g
invoices.
c.
Vouch the authority
for
the acquisition with minutes or
with authorized
delegated
authority.
iii.
Disposals
-.
Vouch the authority
- minutes
or company procedures.
a.
Examine documentation.
b.
Verify reasonableness of the
proceeds.
c.
Pay special attention to
scrapings.
d.
Note accounting
treatment.
iv.
Depreciation
amortization and other write downs
a.
Vouch authorization
of
policy with minutes.
b.
Examine adequacy and
appropriateness of policy.
c.
Investigate revaluations.
d.
Check calculations.
The
above should reconcile
both
as to physical quantity and Rupees
value of the closing
v.
balance.
The
use of plant
or other asset registers can be
of great use to the
auditor.
vi.
vii.
Internal
control procedures for
the purchase, disposal, and
maintenance of assets are
very
relevant.
b.
Existence and Ownership
108
Fundamentals
of Auditing ACC 311
VU
These
are treated together but
note that existence does not
imply ownership. For
example, my television
set
exists
and is
in my house, but is in fact
owned by the person from whom I rent
it.
Verification
procedures include:
i)
Physical
inspection. Auditors
should not sit in
offices but should
get about
seeing
things. Of course, sitting in a client's
office goes to confirm the
existence of
that
office!
ii)
Inspection of
title deeds and certificates
of ownership e.g., share
certificates. This is a technique
that
confirms together existence
and ownership. Problems
arise if the deeds are held
by third
parties
(a certificate from the
third party is needed)
possibly as security for a
loan.
iii)
External
verification. This applies primarily to 'chases in
action' e.g., bank accounts,
debtors,
loans
etc. A letter of acknowledgement is
sought from the bank, debtor
etc.
iv)
Ancillary
evidence. Examples
are:
v)
Confirmation
of the existence of property by
examination of rate (local
taxes) demands,
repair
bills
and other outgoings.
vi)
Ownership
is not necessarily implied. Investment
ownership and existence tend to be
confirmed
by the
receipt of dividends and
interest.
c.
Presentation and
Value
i)
Appropriate
accounting policies must
be adopted, consistently applied,
and adequately
disclosed.
ii)
Accounting
Standards must
be followed.
iii)
Materiality
must
be considered. For example, in a
balance sheet of a large
company it would be
misleading
to show an asset such as
patents in a class by itself it its
total value was negligible
in
relation to
other assets.
iv)
The classification
of
assets can be difficult.
Certain industrial structures can be
considered as
buildings or as
plant with consequent major
differences in depreciation, profit,
and asset and
equity
values. A number of interesting
examples have cropped up in
tax cases. A dry dock
including
the cost of excavation has
been held to be plant (Barclay
Curie 1969), as has a
swimming
pool for use on a caravan
site (Beach Station Caravans
1974). The auditor may take
a
contrary
view to the tax courts and
of course to the Board of the
Company he is auditing.
v)
The
choice of disclosure
of
an asset as a separate item or as part of a
single figure representing a
class
of asset is important for a true
and fair view. Also
important is the choice of words
used in
the
description. In some cases,
assets could be classed as fixed or as
current e.g.
investments.
vi)
The distinction
between revenue
and capital is important.
Sometimes this is a matter
of
accounting
policy e.g. research and
development. Sometimes it is a matter of
opinion; for example
repair
expenditure is revenue but may
include an element of improvement which is
capital.
d.
Other matters relevant to
verification
i)
The
letter of representation.
This
will be discussed in detail in
the next lecture.
ii)
Reasonableness
and
being 'put
upon enquiry'. In all
audit assignments,
the
auditor
investigates thoroughly and
seeks adequate assurances on the
truth and
fairness
of all the items in the
Accounts. However, he does not do so
with a
suspicious
mind. He should not assume that
there is something wrong, but if
he
comes
across something which
seems to him unlikely,
unreasonable,
suspicious
he is
said to be 'put
upon enquiry'. In
such circumstances he is required to
probe
the
matter
to the bottom to
adequately assure him-self that
there exists nothing untoward or to
unearth
the
whole matter.
iii)
Some
assets are pledged
or mortgaged as
securities for loans. This
may involve deposit of
title
deeds
etc., with a lender, or in
some cases the asset
itself. This creates problems
for the auditor
who
must also see that the liability is
properly described as secured.
iv)
Taxation. Tax
and capital allowance
computations should be in accordance
with asset accounts.
Clearly
the auditor will be put upon
enquiry if claims for capital
allowances are made for
items of
plant
which do not appear in the
plant register.
v)
Insurance. The auditor
would be put upon enquiry if
there were no correspondence
between the
assets
in the balance sheet and the
assets insured, and if there
were differences between
the
balance
sheet figures and the
insured values.
109
Fundamentals
of Auditing ACC 311
VU
vi)
Other
than balance sheet date
verification. Some
assets can be verified at
dates other than the
balance
sheet date. The techniques
are discussed later but in
sum (money value) they
are:
a.
Verify at an earlier date
and reconcile with
acquisitions and disposals to
balance sheet date.
b.
Verify at an earlier date
and then parcel them up and
seal the parcels. At balance
sheet date
examine
acquisitions, vouch proceeds of
disposals, and see all other
items are still
sealed.
vii)
Third
parties.
Auditors must take special
care to satisfy them-selves that all
assets held by third
parties
are included in the balance
sheet and verified. Likewise, no
assets owned by third
parties
may be
included in the balance
sheet.
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