Handling Two Party Checks
Author: Bonnie Nagayama and Doug Sleeter Created: Fri Dec 8 12:34:14 2006
In the construction industry, the bookkeeper will occasionally have to handle
receiving a "two-party check." A two-party check is payable to two
companies, usually the prime contractor and a materials supplier, or other subcontractor.
The reason is most often to ensure that the supplier is paid in a timely manner
and that there is a direct link between the payment from the job and the payment
to the supplier. It is also intended to prevent suppliers from attaching liens
to the property by making it impossible for the prime contractor to fail to
pay the supplier.
Here is our suggestion for how to handle two-party checks.
Start by sending the invoice to the customer just as you normally would. When
you receive the payment (a two-party check), record the payment and deposit
it to a "Trade Clearing" bank account. Next, record the bill from
the supplier and pay the bill from the Trade Clearing account. Finally, send
the endorsed check to the supplier and they should deposit the check into their
bank account.
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