Executor's Account in Death of a Partner: Format and Entries
A clear Class 12 Accountancy guide to Executor's Account, deceased partner settlement, journal entries, format, and common mistakes.
- 12th
- Accounts
Death of a partner is one of those partnership topics where students often understand the adjustments but get confused at the last step.
They can calculate goodwill. They can pass revaluation entries. They can distribute reserves. They may even calculate profit up to the date of death correctly. But then the question asks for the Executor’s Account, and suddenly the answer feels unfamiliar.
The good news is that Executor’s Account is not a new type of adjustment. It is the settlement account.
The firm first calculates the total amount due to the deceased partner. Then that amount is transferred to the executor or legal representative of the deceased partner. The Executor’s Account simply shows how that final amount is settled.
Once you keep this one line in mind, the whole topic becomes much calmer.
Who Is an Executor in Partnership Accounts?
An executor is the person who represents the deceased partner’s estate. In many school questions, the word legal representative may also be used.
In simple words, after a partner dies, the firm cannot pay the deceased partner directly. It has to settle the amount with the person legally entitled to receive it on behalf of that partner.
That is why we open an account such as:
Deceased Partner's Executor's Account
If the deceased partner is C, the account may be written as:
C's Executor's Account
The name may look formal, but the purpose is simple. It records the amount payable to C’s executor and the payments made by the firm.
Why Executor’s Account Is Needed
When a partner dies, the partner’s claim in the firm does not disappear. The firm must calculate and settle it.
That claim may include:
| Amounts usually added to the deceased partner’s claim | Amounts usually deducted from the claim |
|---|---|
| Capital balance | Drawings |
| Share of goodwill | Interest on drawings |
| Share of revaluation profit | Share of revaluation loss |
| Share of reserves and accumulated profits | Share of accumulated losses |
| Interest on capital, if allowed | Any amount already withdrawn or adjusted |
| Salary or commission, if allowed | |
| Share of profit till date of death |
All these items are first collected in the deceased partner’s capital account.
After that, the final balance is transferred to the Executor’s Account.
Capital Account and Executor’s Account: The Difference
This is the most important difference in the topic.
| Account | Main purpose |
|---|---|
| Deceased Partner’s Capital Account | To calculate the final amount due to the deceased partner |
| Deceased Partner’s Executor’s Account | To record payment or unpaid balance payable to the executor |
Think of it like this:
The capital account is the calculation sheet.
The Executor’s Account is the settlement sheet.
If the question asks only for the deceased partner’s capital account, you may still have to show the transfer to the executor as the closing item. If the question asks for Executor’s Account also, you must show what happens after that transfer.
Step-by-Step Order in a Death of Partner Question
A full question becomes easier when you follow the same order every time.
| Step | What to do |
|---|---|
| 1 | Read the old profit sharing ratio and the deceased partner’s name |
| 2 | Calculate the new ratio and gaining ratio, if needed |
| 3 | Treat goodwill as instructed |
| 4 | Prepare Revaluation Account, if assets and liabilities are revalued |
| 5 | Distribute reserves, accumulated profits, and accumulated losses |
| 6 | Calculate profit or loss up to the date of death, if required |
| 7 | Record interest on capital, salary, commission, drawings, and interest on drawings, if given |
| 8 | Prepare the deceased partner’s capital account |
| 9 | Transfer the final amount due to the Executor’s Account |
| 10 | Prepare the Executor’s Account and record payment, instalments, or closing balance |
This order prevents the most common mistake: settling the executor before all adjustments have reached the deceased partner’s capital account.
Journal Entry for Transfer to Executor’s Account
After all adjustments, the deceased partner’s capital account will show the amount due.
The entry for transferring that amount is:
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Deceased Partner’s Capital A/c Dr. | Amount due | |
| To Deceased Partner’s Executor’s A/c | Amount due |
If C is the deceased partner and Rs. 1,20,000 is due to C, the entry is:
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| C’s Capital A/c Dr. | Rs. 1,20,000 | |
| To C’s Executor’s A/c | Rs. 1,20,000 |
This closes C’s Capital Account and creates a liability towards C’s executor.
Format of Deceased Partner’s Executor’s Account
Here is the basic format.
| Deceased Partner’s Executor’s Account | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| To Bank A/c, amount paid | Amount | |
| To Balance c/d, amount still payable | Amount | |
| By Deceased Partner’s Capital A/c | Amount due | |
| By Interest on Executor’s A/c, if payable | Amount |
This account is a liability account from the firm’s point of view. So it is credited when the amount becomes payable and debited when payment is made.
If the entire amount is paid immediately, there will be no closing balance.
If only part of the amount is paid, the unpaid balance remains as a liability.
Payment to Executor
If the firm pays the executor immediately, the entry is:
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Deceased Partner’s Executor’s A/c Dr. | Amount paid | |
| To Bank A/c | Amount paid |
Suppose Rs. 1,20,000 is due to C’s executor and the firm pays the full amount by bank.
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| C’s Executor’s A/c Dr. | Rs. 1,20,000 | |
| To Bank A/c | Rs. 1,20,000 |
After this, the Executor’s Account is closed.
When Only Part Payment Is Made
Sometimes the firm does not pay the full amount immediately. It may pay a portion now and leave the balance payable.
For example, suppose Rs. 1,20,000 is due to C’s executor. The firm pays Rs. 70,000 immediately and keeps the balance unpaid.
The Executor’s Account will look like this:
| C’s Executor’s Account | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| To Bank A/c | Rs. 70,000 | |
| To Balance c/d | Rs. 50,000 | |
| By C’s Capital A/c | Rs. 1,20,000 | |
| Total | Rs. 1,20,000 | Rs. 1,20,000 |
The balance of Rs. 50,000 is shown as a liability in the balance sheet.
Interest on Executor’s Account
If the question says that interest is payable on the unpaid amount, interest is credited to the Executor’s Account.
The entry is:
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Interest on Executor’s A/c Dr. | Interest amount | |
| To Deceased Partner’s Executor’s A/c | Interest amount |
Then interest is transferred to the Profit and Loss Account:
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Profit and Loss A/c Dr. | Interest amount | |
| To Interest on Executor’s A/c | Interest amount |
Why is this interest treated as an expense?
Because once the amount is due to the executor, the firm is holding money payable to someone outside the continuing ownership of the firm. Interest on that unpaid balance is a cost to the firm.
Profit Up to the Date of Death
This is one adjustment that often affects the amount transferred to the executor.
When a partner dies during the accounting year, the final profit for the full year is not yet known. The question may ask you to estimate the deceased partner’s share of profit up to the date of death.
Common bases are:
| Basis given in the question | How profit is estimated |
|---|---|
| Previous year’s profit | Use time proportion up to the date of death |
| Average profit of past years | Use average profit and time proportion |
| Sales up to date of death | Calculate profit using the given sales and profit rate |
If profit up to the date of death is credited to the deceased partner, the entry is usually:
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Profit and Loss Suspense A/c Dr. | Deceased partner’s share | |
| To Deceased Partner’s Capital A/c | Deceased partner’s share |
If it is a loss, the entry is reversed:
| Particulars | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| Deceased Partner’s Capital A/c Dr. | Deceased partner’s share of loss | |
| To Profit and Loss Suspense A/c | Deceased partner’s share of loss |
The word suspense is used because the final profit for the year has not yet been completely calculated.
Goodwill and the Deceased Partner’s Share
Goodwill is important because the deceased partner had a right to a share in the firm’s reputation built up before death.
If goodwill is adjusted through capital accounts, the deceased partner’s share of goodwill is credited to the deceased partner’s capital account. The gaining partners are usually debited in their gaining ratio.
For example, A, B, and C share profits in the ratio 3:2:1. C dies. The firm’s goodwill is valued at Rs. 90,000.
C’s share of goodwill is:
| Particular | Amount |
|---|---|
| Firm’s goodwill | Rs. 90,000 |
| C’s share | 1/6 |
| C’s share of goodwill | Rs. 15,000 |
If A and B gain in the ratio 3:2, they compensate C as follows:
| Partner | Adjustment |
|---|---|
| A’s Capital A/c debited | Rs. 9,000 |
| B’s Capital A/c debited | Rs. 6,000 |
| C’s Capital A/c credited | Rs. 15,000 |
This Rs. 15,000 increases the amount that will eventually be transferred to C’s Executor’s Account.
Full Worked Example
Let us solve one compact example from start to finish.
A, B, and C are partners sharing profits and losses in the ratio 3:2:1. C dies on 30 June. The firm’s books show the following:
| Particular | Amount |
|---|---|
| C’s capital balance | Rs. 80,000 |
| General reserve | Rs. 60,000 |
| Revaluation profit | Rs. 30,000 |
| Firm’s goodwill | Rs. 90,000 |
| C’s drawings | Rs. 6,000 |
| Profit for the previous year | Rs. 1,20,000 |
The firm closes its books on 31 March. Profit up to the date of death is to be estimated on the basis of the previous year’s profit. Rs. 70,000 is paid immediately to C’s executor. The balance remains payable.
Step 1: Calculate C’s Share of Each Adjustment
C’s share in the old ratio is 1/6.
| Item | Calculation | C’s share |
|---|---|---|
| General reserve | Rs. 60,000 x 1/6 | Rs. 10,000 |
| Revaluation profit | Rs. 30,000 x 1/6 | Rs. 5,000 |
| Goodwill | Rs. 90,000 x 1/6 | Rs. 15,000 |
Now calculate profit up to the date of death.
From 1 April to 30 June, the period is 3 months.
| Particular | Calculation | Amount |
|---|---|---|
| Estimated profit for 3 months | Rs. 1,20,000 x 3/12 | Rs. 30,000 |
| C’s share | Rs. 30,000 x 1/6 | Rs. 5,000 |
So C’s share of profit till death is Rs. 5,000.
Step 2: Prepare C’s Capital Account
| C’s Capital Account | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| To Drawings A/c | Rs. 6,000 | |
| To C’s Executor’s A/c | Rs. 1,09,000 | |
| By Balance b/d | Rs. 80,000 | |
| By General Reserve A/c | Rs. 10,000 | |
| By Revaluation A/c | Rs. 5,000 | |
| By A’s Capital A/c and B’s Capital A/c, goodwill | Rs. 15,000 | |
| By Profit and Loss Suspense A/c | Rs. 5,000 | |
| Total | Rs. 1,15,000 | Rs. 1,15,000 |
The amount due to C’s executor is Rs. 1,09,000.
Step 3: Prepare C’s Executor’s Account
| C’s Executor’s Account | Debit | Credit |
|---|---|---|
| To Bank A/c | Rs. 70,000 | |
| To Balance c/d | Rs. 39,000 | |
| By C’s Capital A/c | Rs. 1,09,000 | |
| Total | Rs. 1,09,000 | Rs. 1,09,000 |
The unpaid balance of Rs. 39,000 will appear as a liability in the balance sheet.
If the Executor Is Paid in Instalments
Some questions say that the executor will be paid in instalments.
For example:
The amount due to C's executor will be paid in two equal annual instalments with interest at 6 percent per annum on the outstanding balance.
In such a question, you should prepare the Executor’s Account carefully year by year.
The usual pattern is:
| Step | Treatment |
|---|---|
| 1 | Bring down the opening balance payable |
| 2 | Add interest on the outstanding balance, if given |
| 3 | Record the instalment paid through bank |
| 4 | Carry down the remaining balance |
Do not calculate interest on the original amount every year unless the question says so. Interest is normally calculated on the outstanding balance for the relevant period.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
| Mistake | Why it is wrong |
|---|---|
| Crediting goodwill directly to Executor’s Account | Goodwill first affects the deceased partner’s capital account |
| Forgetting profit up to date of death | The deceased partner may be entitled to profit earned before death |
| Debiting Executor’s Account when amount becomes payable | Executor’s Account should be credited when the firm owes the amount |
| Treating unpaid balance as closed | Unpaid balance is still a liability |
| Mixing capital account and Executor’s Account | One calculates the claim, the other settles it |
| Ignoring interest on unpaid executor balance | Interest must be recorded if the question provides for it |
A Quick Memory Map
Use this simple map when revising:
Goodwill, revaluation, reserves, profit till death, drawings
|
v
Deceased Partner's Capital Account
|
v
Amount due
|
v
Deceased Partner's Executor's Account
|
v
Bank payment or balance payable
This map is enough to prevent most errors in the topic.
The accounts may look long, but the logic is actually respectful and fair. The firm calculates what belonged to the deceased partner and then settles it with the executor.
That is all Executor’s Account is meant to show.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Executor’s Account in death of a partner?
Executor’s Account is the account opened to record the amount payable to the deceased partner’s executor or legal representative. It shows the final amount transferred from the deceased partner’s capital account, payments made, interest if any, and the unpaid balance.
Is Executor’s Account a real account or personal account?
Executor’s Account is a personal account because it represents the person or legal representative to whom the firm owes money.
Why is Executor’s Account credited?
It is credited because the firm has a liability towards the executor. When payment is made, the account is debited and bank is credited.
What is the entry for transferring the deceased partner’s balance to Executor’s Account?
The entry is:
Deceased Partner's Capital A/c Dr.
To Deceased Partner's Executor's A/c
This entry closes the deceased partner’s capital account and creates the payable balance in the Executor’s Account.
Does goodwill go directly to Executor’s Account?
No. Goodwill is first credited to the deceased partner’s capital account. After all adjustments are complete, the final capital balance is transferred to the Executor’s Account.
How is profit till date of death recorded?
If profit is estimated up to the date of death, the deceased partner’s share is credited to the deceased partner’s capital account. The usual entry is:
Profit and Loss Suspense A/c Dr.
To Deceased Partner's Capital A/c
For a loss, the entry is reversed.
Where is the unpaid executor balance shown?
The unpaid balance in Executor’s Account is shown as a liability in the balance sheet until it is paid.
Is interest allowed on Executor’s Account?
Interest is recorded when the question provides for it or when the settlement terms require it. It is credited to the Executor’s Account and treated as an expense for the firm.
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