nusource
09-13-2005, 11:57 AM
Customer issued a cheque for $214.00 to pay for an invoice of $160.00, leaving a credit balance of $54.00 in the account because he overpaid.
The cheque was returned nsf.
In a normal nsf situation(ie if a chq of $160 was issued), I would create a credit memo with a zero amount, entering all lines exactly as the original invoice($160.00) and then input a line ("nsf chq from customer") equal to -$160.00.
Then I would create a new invoice same as the original invoice amount ($160.00) with additional charge for nsf fee.
Since the bank would debit my account for the nsf cheque, so I would write a cheque of $160.00 and credit the "nsf chq from customer" account.
Since the cheque I received is $214.00, ie there is a credit balance in the customer's account. How do I enter the Credit Memo to reflect the situation. I tried to create the Credit Memo with line same as the original invoice ($160.00) and a line for
-$214.00, resulting in a negative Credit Memo (-$54.00), but was rejected by Quickbooks.
Any suggestions
The cheque was returned nsf.
In a normal nsf situation(ie if a chq of $160 was issued), I would create a credit memo with a zero amount, entering all lines exactly as the original invoice($160.00) and then input a line ("nsf chq from customer") equal to -$160.00.
Then I would create a new invoice same as the original invoice amount ($160.00) with additional charge for nsf fee.
Since the bank would debit my account for the nsf cheque, so I would write a cheque of $160.00 and credit the "nsf chq from customer" account.
Since the cheque I received is $214.00, ie there is a credit balance in the customer's account. How do I enter the Credit Memo to reflect the situation. I tried to create the Credit Memo with line same as the original invoice ($160.00) and a line for
-$214.00, resulting in a negative Credit Memo (-$54.00), but was rejected by Quickbooks.
Any suggestions