Issue:
Payments were entered into SchoolCash Register, but instead of completing the closeout process:
The school manually created a deposit in the Deposit Module.
Bank paperwork was completed and funds were sent to the bank.
Result:
SchoolCash Register shows unclosed payments, but the school no longer physically has the cash or checks.
Also, payments in the SchoolCash Register cannot be deleted, only modified.
Solution: Modify and Refund SchoolCash Register Payments to Clear the Closeout
Since the payments must remain in the system for record-keeping but are already accounted for in the bank deposit:
Step-by-Step Instructions:
1. Payment Was Made by Check:
Modify the Payment Record:
Select “Modify a Record”.
Click the icon at the end of the record to edit it.
Change the Payment Type:
Change the Check tender to Cash.
Important: This must be done; otherwise, the system will continue looking for a check during closeout.
Refund the Cash Payment:
Refund the now-updated Cash payment back to Cash.
This refund will cancel out the incorrect payment entry.
4. Verify:
The original check payment now appears as a cash payment.
The closeout report shows this payment as cash and indicates it has been refunded.
The net effect on totals is zero.
2. Payment Was Made by Cash:

Simply refund the amount back to Cash.
This will cancel the original payment entry.
Final Steps:
After all incorrect check and cash entries have been corrected and refunded:
The system will now show the total amount to be deposited as $0.00.
Proceed to complete the closeout.
A $0.00 deposit will now display in the deposit module, which can be posted to the ledger without affecting financial balances.
This ensures:
The Register is cleared.
No duplicate deposits are recorded.
The ledger and reports stay balanced.
? Important Notes:
This process does not impact financial records, as the manual deposit has already been submitted and accounted for.
The $0.00 deposit generated from this Register closeout can still be added to the ledger to complete the audit trail.
This approach maintains data integrity without risking duplicate deposits or accounting discrepancies.