Stratton,
J.A.:—The
sole
issue
in
this
appeal
addresses
the
meaning
of
the
word
"filed"
as
it
appears
in
subsection
36(1)
of
the
Alberta
Corporate
Tax
Act,
c.
A-17
R.S.A.
1980.
The
material
part
of
that
section
reads
as
follows:
A
return
for
each
taxation
year
of
a
corporation
.
.
.
shall
be
filed
bY
or
on
behalf
of
the
corporation
with
the
provincial
treasurer
.
.
.
within
six
months
from
the
end
of
the
taxation
year.
It
‘is
common
ground
that
the
appellant,
a
taxpayer
bound
by
this
section,
mailed
its
1988
corporate
tax
return
by
registered
mail
from
the
United
States
to
the
respondent
on
June
30,
1989,
and
that
this
return
was
received
by
the
respondent
on
July
13,
1989.
Nor
is
it
disputed
that
June
30,
1989
was
the
last
day
of
the
six-month
period
referred
to
in
subsection
36(1).
The
respondent
imposed
on
the
appellant
a
late
filling
penalty
as
provided
by
the
Act
and,
in
so
doing,
has
taken
the
position
that
the
appellant’s
return
must
be
considered
as
having
been
filed
only
when
it
is
received
by
the
respondent.
The
appellant
contends
that
it
is
filed,
for
the
purposes
of
the
Act,
when
it
is
mailed,
and
on
that
basis
the
appellant
would
not
be
subject
to
a
late
filing
penalty.
The
appellant
appealed
the
respondent's
decision
to
impose
the
penalty
to
Queen's
Bench.
Madam
Justice
Rawlins
held
that
the
word
“filed”
in
the
Alberta
Corporate
Tax
Act,
R.S.A.
1980,
c.
A-17,
is
.
.
.
clear
and
unequivocal
and
connotes
the
requirement
of
actual
delivery
before
filing
and
therefore
a
mailed
document
is
not
considered
"filed"
until
it
is
received
and
not
at
the
point
of
mailing".
That
decision
has
now
been
appealed
to
this
Court.
The
appellant’s
principal
argument
is
that
a
review
of
the
legislative
history
of
the
Alberta
Act
supports
its
contention
that
filing
is
accomplished
upon
mailing.
Counsel
pointed
to
the
fact
that
the
comparable
provisions
of
predecessor
Acts
to
the
current
Alberta
Act
required
a
corporation
to
"deliver"a
return
by
a
given
date
to
the
appropriate
provincial
authority.
The
appellant's
argument
is
that
the
fact
that
the
earlier
Acts
were
amended
in
1961
by
substituting
the
word
"filed"
for
"delivered"
indicate
a
clear
intent
that
the
concept
of
requiring
actual
delivery
to
the
provincial
authority
was
no
longer
accepted.
We
disagree
for
a
number
of
reasons.
Firstly,
we
adopt
the
words
of
Chief
Justice
Tindal
in
the
Sussex
Peerage
Case
as
quoted
in
Driedger
on
Construction
of
Statutes
(second
ed.,
page
2):
.
.
.
if
the
words
of
the
statute
are
in
themselves
precise
and
unambiguous,
then
no
more
can
be
necessary
than
to
expound
those
words
in
their
natural
and
ordinary
sense.
This
is
surely
a
first
principle
of
statutory
interpretation
and,
as
did
the
learned
trial
judge,
we
also
find
no
ambiguity
in
the
use
of
the
words
“filed
with
the
provincial
treasurer"
as
used
in
subsection
36(1).
In
fact,
we
find
those
words
to
be
clear
and
precise
as
did
Mr.
Justice
MacCallum
in
a
recent
(1991)
decision
in
Queen’s
Bench,
namely
Bruce
Lake
Farms
Ltd.
v.
The
Provincial
Treasurer
(Q.B.
Case
No.
8903-17111).
It
also
should
be
noted
that
various
provisions
of
the
federal
Income
Tax
Act,
R.S.C.
1952,
c.
148
(am.
S.C.
1970-71-72,
c.
63)
(the
"federal
Act")
are
incorporated
by
reference
into
the
Alberta
Act.
In
1986,
however,
the
Alberta
Act
was
amended
by
subsection
2(10)
which
expressly
provided
that
subsection
248(7)
of
the
federal
Act
did
not
apply
"for
the
purposes
of
the
Alberta
Act".
Subsection
248(7)
of
the
federal
Act
provided
that
for
the
purpose
of
the
federal
Act:
Anything
sent
by
mail
shall
be
deemed
to
have
been
received
by
the
recipient
on
the
day
that
it
was
mailed.
This
amendment
addressed
the
section
of
the
federal
Act
which,
like
the
Alberta
Act,
required
filing
by
a
certain
date.
Although
not
decisive
on
the
question
now
before
us,
we
find
the
Alberta
amendment
to
be
instructive
as
to
the
intent
of
the
Legislature,
namely
to
negate
the
concept
that
mailing
equated
with
the
filing.
Finally,
in
answer
to
the
appellant's
argument
that
the
Legislature
intended
a
change
in
its
position
vis-a-vis
the
receipt
of
a
return
when
it
changed
the
word
“delivered”
to
"filed",
we
point
to
subsection
33(2)
of
the
Interpretation
Act
of
Alberta,
R.S.A.
1980,
c.
1-7
which
specifically
negates
such
conclusion.
We
also
point
out,
as
observed
by
the
Court
during
the
course
of
argument,
that
administrative
guidelines
are
not
determinative
of
legislative
intent
and
accordingly
the
statement
in
the
1988
Alberta
Corporate
Income
Tax
Return
to
which
counsel
for
the
appellant
referred
us,
is
not
persuasive.
In
any
event,
the
specific
guideline
referred
to
in
that
comment
does
not
address
the
meaning
of
"filing"
for
the
purposes
of
the
Alberta
Act.
Accordingly,
we
all
agree,
for
the
foregoing
reasons,
that
the
appeal
should
be
dismissed.
Costs
will
follow
the
event.
Appeal
dismissed.