Curtis S. Ridlon v. New Hampshire Bureau of Securities Regulation ( 2019 )


Menu:
  • NOTICE: This opinion is subject to motions for rehearing under Rule 22 as well
    as formal revision before publication in the New Hampshire Reports. Readers are
    requested to notify the Reporter, Supreme Court of New Hampshire, One Charles
    Doe Drive, Concord, New Hampshire 03301, of any editorial errors in order that
    corrections may be made before the opinion goes to press. Errors may be
    reported by e-mail at the following address: reporter@courts.state.nh.us.
    Opinions are available on the Internet by 9:00 a.m. on the morning of their
    release. The direct address of the court’s home page is:
    http://www.courts.state.nh.us/supreme.
    THE SUPREME COURT OF NEW HAMPSHIRE
    ___________________________
    Merrimack
    No. 2018-0035
    CURTIS S. RIDLON
    v.
    NEW HAMPSHIRE BUREAU OF SECURITIES REGULATION
    Argued: October 24, 2018
    Opinion Issued: July 24, 2019
    Preti Flaherty, PLLP, of Concord (Brian M. Quirk and Nathan R.
    Fennessy on the brief, and Mr. Quirk orally), for the plaintiff.
    Gordon J. MacDonald, attorney general (K. Allen Brooks, senior assistant
    attorney general, and Scott E. Sakowski, assistant attorney general, on the
    brief, and Mr. Brooks orally), for the defendant.
    LYNN, C.J. In this appeal we are asked to determine whether Part I,
    Article 20 of the New Hampshire Constitution guarantees that a party subject
    to an administrative enforcement action undertaken by the defendant, the New
    Hampshire Bureau of Securities Regulation (Bureau), be afforded a jury trial.
    The Superior Court (McNamara, J.) answered the question in the affirmative.
    We disagree and therefore reverse.
    The following relevant facts are derived from the record. The plaintiff,
    Curtis S. Ridlon, was formerly employed as an investment adviser. In April
    2017, the Bureau brought an administrative enforcement action against
    Ridlon, alleging that he charged clients approximately $2.8 million in improper
    fees. The relief sought by the Bureau included civil penalties of up to
    $3,235,000, restitution in the amount of $1,343,427.20, and disgorgement of
    up to $1,513,711.09. See RSA 421-B:6-604(d)-(e) (2015) (amended 2018).1 By
    agreement of the parties, Ridlon filed a declaratory judgment petition in the
    trial court asserting that he was constitutionally entitled to a jury trial and
    seeking to enjoin the administrative proceedings from continuing. In response,
    the Bureau filed a motion to dismiss. The trial court denied the Bureau’s
    motion, ruling that Part I, Article 20 of the State Constitution affords Ridlon
    the right to a jury trial, and enjoining any further administrative proceedings
    by the Bureau. This appeal followed.
    Ridlon argues that the trial court correctly ruled that he has a
    constitutional right to a jury trial because the Bureau seeks penalties in excess
    of $6 million and, in the alternative, because the action against him “amounts
    to an action for common law fraud.” Because we are the final arbiter of the
    meaning of both statutes, Appeal of Laconia Patrolman Assoc., 
    164 N.H. 552
    ,
    555 (2013), and the State Constitution, Petition of Below, 
    151 N.H. 135
    , 139
    (2004), we review the trial court’s decision de novo, Linehan v. Rockingham
    County Comm’rs, 
    151 N.H. 276
    , 278 (2004).
    Part I, Article 20 of the New Hampshire Constitution governs jury trials
    in civil cases. It provides:
    In all controversies concerning property, and in all suits between
    two or more persons except those in which another practice is and
    has been customary and except those in which the value in
    controversy does not exceed $1,500 and no title to real estate is
    involved, the parties have a right to a trial by jury. This method of
    procedure shall be held sacred, unless, in cases arising on the high
    seas and in cases relating to mariners’ wages, the legislature shall
    think it necessary hereafter to alter it.
    N.H. CONST. pt. I, art. 20. Although “[i]t is beyond dispute that the right to a
    jury trial is a fundamental one under our State Constitution in both the civil
    and the criminal contexts,” State v. Morrill, 
    123 N.H. 707
    , 711 (1983), it is
    1 We note that RSA chapter 421-B was repealed and reenacted in 2015, during the course of
    Ridlon’s alleged conduct. See Laws 2015, 273:1 (eff. Jan. 1, 2016). At least some of this conduct
    would arguably be governed by the previous iteration of the chapter. See RSA 421-B:7-701(a)
    (2015). Because the parties apply the 2016 version on appeal, for purposes of this appeal, we
    assume that the 2016 version of the chapter applies. See In the Matter of White & White, 
    170 N.H. 619
    , 621 (2018) (applying the current version of a statute where the trial court and the
    parties did same).
    2
    equally irrefutable that in civil cases the right is considerably more limited than
    it is in criminal cases, State v. Bilc, 
    158 N.H. 651
    , 653 (2009). Specifically, in
    civil cases the right “extends only to those cases for which the jury trial right
    existed when the constitution was adopted in 1784.” 
    Morrill, 123 N.H. at 712
    .
    As we have explained, “Part I, Article 20 did not create or establish a right to a
    jury trial not before existing.” Hair Excitement v. L’Oreal U.S.A., 
    158 N.H. 363
    ,
    368 (2009) (quotation and brackets omitted). Rather, “[i]t was a recognition of
    an existing right, guaranteeing it as it then stood and was practiced, guarding
    it against repeal, infringement, or undue trammel by legislative action, but not
    extending it so as to include what had not before been within its benefits.” 
    Id. (quotation omitted).
    “To resolve whether a party has a right to trial by jury in a particular
    action, we generally look to both the nature of the case and the relief sought,
    and ascertain whether the customary practice included a trial by jury before
    1784.” 
    Id. (quotation omitted).
    “Partly as a result of this test, and at times
    independently thereof, it has been decided that a guaranty of trial by jury
    cannot be invoked in special, statutory or summary proceedings unknown to
    the common law.” Hallahan v. Riley, 
    94 N.H. 338
    , 339-40 (1947); accord In re
    Sandra H., 
    150 N.H. 634
    , 636 (2004).
    Relying on state and federal case law, the trial court concluded that the
    Bureau “cannot seek a fine of $2,500 for a violation of RSA 421-B without a
    jury determination of liability.” At the outset of our analysis, we observe that,
    to the extent the trial court relied on federal precedent interpreting the Seventh
    Amendment to the United States Constitution, such reliance was misplaced.
    The jury trial guaranty enshrined in the Seventh Amendment is not among the
    federal rights that have been held to be encompassed within the Fourteenth
    Amendment’s due process clause and thus binding in state court actions. See
    Gasperini v. Center for Humanities, Inc., 
    518 U.S. 415
    , 432 (1996) (recognizing
    that the Seventh Amendment “governs proceedings in federal court, but not in
    state court”); Opinion of the Justices, 
    121 N.H. 480
    , 482-83 (1981) (noting that
    “the Seventh Amendment is one of the few remaining provisions in the Bill of
    Rights which has not been held to be applicable to the states through the
    Fourteenth Amendment” (quotation omitted)); see also 47 Am. Jur. 2d Jury § 5,
    at 630 (2006). More importantly, as the Bureau points out, the analysis we
    use in determining whether the jury trial right conferred by Part I, Article 20
    applies in a given case differs from that employed by federal courts in making
    similar determinations under the Seventh Amendment. Compare, e.g., Tull v.
    United States, 
    481 U.S. 412
    , 420-21 (1987) (cautioning that the Seventh
    Amendment may require “trial by jury in actions unheard of at common law,”
    and noting that “characterizing the relief sought is more important than finding
    a precisely analogous common-law cause of action in determining whether the
    Seventh Amendment guarantees a jury trial” (quotation and brackets omitted)),
    with Franklin Lodge of Elks v. Marcoux, 
    149 N.H. 581
    , 592 (2003) (explaining
    that focusing solely upon the nature of damages “fails to address whether . . .
    3
    the right remedied in this case . . . was recognized at common law in 1784 and
    customarily resolved by jury trial,” and “makes no effort to appraise the
    seemingly comprehensive nature of the” statutory scheme). In light of this
    divergence, and because neither party has asked us to eschew our traditional
    methodology in favor of the federal approach, we decline to give controlling
    weight to Seventh Amendment jurisprudence when determining whether Part I,
    Article 20 affords a state court litigant the right to a jury trial.
    Moreover, the cases cited by the trial court, and relied upon by Ridlon on
    appeal for the proposition that claims involving statutory penalties above the
    constitutional limit obligate a trial by jury, do not address the applicability of
    the jury trial right under the State Constitution to what we have described as
    “purely statutory” causes of action. See Pomponio v. State, 
    106 N.H. 273
    , 274
    (1965). When assessing the right to a jury trial in such circumstances, we
    have explained that we must “consider the comprehensive nature of the
    statutory framework to determine whether the jury trial right extends to the
    action.” Hair 
    Excitement, 158 N.H. at 368
    (quotation omitted). State securities
    laws, commonly referred to as “Blue Sky Laws,” are designed to prevent fraud
    and protect the public. 79A C.J.S. Securities Regulation § 482, at 534-36
    (2009). They seek to create “a balanced regulatory scheme to cope with the
    problems of modern securities markets” in a given state. 
    Id. at 534.
    “The first
    legislative attempts to regulate securities transactions were effected on the
    state level, with the first general securities law being said to have been enacted
    by the State of Kansas in 1911, and with 48 jurisdictions having enacted such
    statutes by 1933.” Brenner v. Oppenheimer & Co. Inc., 
    44 P.3d 364
    , 371 (Kan.
    2002) (quotation omitted). New Hampshire enacted its first blue sky law in
    1917. See Laws 1917, ch. 202. In its original form, the statute made
    violations of its terms “punishable upon conviction . . . by a fine of not more
    than two thousand dollars, or by imprisonment for not more than six months,
    or by both such fine and imprisonment,” and also provided that “such false or
    misleading statements or information so furnished shall be evidence in court
    . . . in a suit to recover damages on account of loss sustained . . . .” Laws
    1917, ch. 202, at 762-63. The statute was amended in 1981 to include a
    provision that gave the attorney general the authority to seek “civil penalties for
    violations of” the statute. See Laws 1981, ch. 214, at 214. The amendments
    further granted the commissioner of insurance the authority to impose an
    administrative fine of not more than $2,500 for knowing violations of “any rule
    or order” issued by the commissioner. Laws 1981, ch. 214, at 216.2 In 2015,
    amendments to the statute as a whole created the current statutory scheme.
    See Laws 2015, 273:1.
    In its current form, the Uniform Securities Act is comprised of 55
    sections contained in seven separate articles. See RSA 421-B:1-101 to B:7-701
    2At the time, the commissioner of insurance was charged with administering the statute. Laws
    1981, ch. 214, at 213.
    4
    (2015) (amended 2017, 2018). The Act specifies detailed requirements for the
    registration of securities, see RSA 421-B:3-301 to -307, and those who sell
    them, see RSA 421-B:4-401 to -412. It charges the secretary of state with
    administering the Act, and confers upon the secretary “all powers specifically
    granted or reasonably implied in order to perform the substantive
    responsibilities imposed by this chapter,” RSA 421-B:6-601(d), including the
    power to “bring administrative actions to enforce the securities law” and
    “investigate and impose penalties for violations of” said laws, RSA 421-B:6-
    601(b)(4)-(5). When the secretary of state believes provisions of the Act have
    been, or are about to be, violated, the secretary may bring an administrative
    enforcement action under RSA 421-B:6-604. See RSA 421-B:6-604. The
    hearings procedures at the administrative level are governed by RSA 421-B:6-
    613. See RSA 421-B:6-613(a). These “[a]dministrative hearings shall not be
    bound by common law or statutory rules of evidence, nor by technical or formal
    rules of procedure,” and “[a]ll relevant, material, and reliable evidence shall be
    admissible.” RSA 421-B:6-613(u). Following a hearing, the presiding officer
    “shall issue a written decision stating the action to be taken by the
    department,” which “shall be reached upon the basis of a preponderance of the
    evidence.” RSA 421-B:6-613(v). The actions may include the imposition of “a
    civil penalty up to a maximum of $2,500 for a single violation,” RSA 421-B:6-
    604(d), as well as “an order of rescission, restitution, or disgorgement,” RSA
    421-B:6-604(e). All “[f]inal orders issued by the secretary of state under this
    chapter are subject to judicial review in accordance with RSA 541,” RSA 421-
    B:6-609, meaning that upon satisfying the statutory rehearing procedures, an
    aggrieved party may appeal directly to this court, see RSA 541:6 (2007).
    As the above recitation demonstrates, the statutory procedures
    established by the legislature for the regulation of securities “militate[ ] against
    any implication of a trial by jury.” 
    Hallahan, 94 N.H. at 340
    . The rights and
    obligations that govern “depend entirely upon the statute.” 
    Pomponio, 106 N.H. at 274
    . They are comprehensive in their scope, see Hair 
    Excitement, 158 N.H. at 368
    , and “designed to facilitate a simple and speedy determination” of
    the claims brought by the secretary, 
    Hallahan, 94 N.H. at 340
    ; see, e.g., RSA
    421-B:6-613(o) (outlining informal conference procedures intended to simplify
    the issues, reach agreements or stipulations which “avoid unnecessary proof,”
    and consider “[a]ny other matters which might contribute to the prompt,
    orderly, and fair conduct of the proceeding”). Thus, even if we were to assume,
    as Ridlon posits, that the types of relief that may be sought by the secretary
    under the statute — i.e., civil penalties, fines, restitution, and disgorgement (all
    of which remedies the statute describes as “penalties,” see RSA 421-B:6-
    601(b)(5), :6-604(d)-(e)) — bear certain similarities to a common law claim in
    debt as to which a right to trial by jury would have existed in 1784, see 
    Tull, 481 U.S. at 420
    , consideration of the overall statutory scheme fashioned by the
    Securities Act persuades us that the administrative enforcement mechanism it
    created was unknown to the common law in 1784 and is not compatible with
    trial by jury.
    5
    The trial court acknowledged our precedents as cited above, but
    reasoned that they were not controlling because, in its view: (1) Part I, Article
    20 applies differently when the State seeks to recover a penalty from a private
    party; and (2) the action against Ridlon is akin to common law fraud. With
    respect to the first point, it is true that there are certain circumstances in
    which the State is treated differently from a private party when it comes to the
    availability of a jury trial under Part I, Article 20. For example, the
    constitutional right to a jury trial is not available to the State at all, whether it
    be a plaintiff or defendant in litigation. See Wooster v. Plymouth, 
    62 N.H. 193
    ,
    201 (1882). We have also explained that there is “no right under article 20 to a
    trial by jury in an action [brought] against the State.” Newell v. N.H. Div. of
    Welfare, 
    131 N.H. 88
    , 90 (1988) (emphasis added). But the differential
    treatment described in Newell stems from the “established principle of
    jurisprudence in all civilized nations that the sovereign cannot be sued in its
    own courts, or in any other, without its consent and permission,” and where it
    does waive this privilege, “it may prescribe the terms and conditions on which
    it consents to be sued, and the manner in which the suit shall be conducted.”
    
    Wooster, 62 N.H. at 204
    ; see 47 Am. Jur. 2d Jury § 43, at 661-62. However,
    our case law offers no support for the view that a person’s right to a jury trial
    enjoys an enhanced status when it is the State, rather than a private party,
    that brings the claim.3 The authorities relied upon by the trial court in so
    holding are readily distinguishable from the case at hand.
    For example, in Morrill we were asked to determine whether the
    sanctions, including a fine of up to $1,000, “attached to [driving while
    intoxicated, first offense] take it outside the realm of petty offenses not
    requiring trial by jury” under Part I, Article 15. 
    Morrill, 123 N.H. at 712
    (quotation and brackets omitted). We held that they did, explaining “that the
    framers of our constitution did not intend that individual criminal defendants
    be denied a jury trial in cases where fines may be levied which are greater than
    the amount constitutionally entitling civil litigants to a jury determination.” 
    Id. (emphasis added).
    In our view, it was illogical to believe that a civil litigant
    would be entitled to a jury trial pursuant to Part I, Article 20 when the amount
    in controversy exceeded $500,4 but a criminal litigant would not be afforded
    3 Ridlon attempts to distinguish this case from Hair Excitement on the basis that that case dealt
    with a statutory claim (under the Consumer Protection Act) made by a private party as plaintiff,
    whereas this case involves a statutory claim (under the Securities Act) brought by the State
    against a private party as defendant. The distinction is unavailing, however, because our Article
    20 cases have never suggested either that the right to a jury trial, where it exists, is not equally
    available whether the party claiming it is a plaintiff or a defendant, or that the jury right enjoys
    some special status when the claim at issue is brought against a private party by an agency of
    government. Thus, in determining whether a constitutional right to a jury trial is available to a
    private party, the fact that such party’s opponent in the litigation is the State, as in this case, as
    opposed to a private party, as in Hair Excitement, is immaterial.
    4 In 1988, Part I, Article 20 of the State Constitution was amended to increase the threshold
    beyond which a jury trial was required from $500 to $1,500. See Gilman v. Lake Sunapee Props.,
    
    159 N.H. 26
    , 30 (2009) (providing a brief outline of Article 20’s history).
    6
    that same right when “charged with offenses under our penal code.” 
    Id. at 713
    (emphasis added). Thus, although the offense at issue in Morrill was classified
    as a violation, which does not constitute a crime, see RSA 625:9, II(b) (2016),
    our analysis referenced Part I, Article 20, not because it was substantively
    applicable to the case, but merely for comparison purposes, in determining
    whether the fine called for by the statute was sufficiently severe to confer the
    right to a jury trial applicable to criminal cases under Part I, Article 15.
    Nor does our decision in Town of Henniker v. Homo, 
    136 N.H. 88
    (1992),
    compel a different conclusion. There, the defendants were fined by the
    superior court “for maintaining a junk yard on their property without a license,
    in violation of RSA 236:114 and the Henniker Zoning Ordinance.” Town of
    
    Henniker, 136 N.H. at 88
    . Based on the language of the relevant statutes, we
    concluded that the defendants had committed a separate violation on each day
    they continued to operate the junk yard without a license, resulting in 606
    separate violations. See 
    id. at 89-90.
    We assumed, without deciding, that the
    defendants would be constitutionally entitled to a jury trial if the maximum
    fine per violation exceeded the threshold of Part I, Article 20. See 
    id. at 89.
    Because the ordinance limited the maximum fine per violation to $100, we held
    that the defendants did not have a right to a jury trial on any of their
    violations, 
    id. at 90,
    even though the superior court “imposed fines which
    totalled in excess of the amount that constitutionally entitles civil litigants to a
    jury trial,” 
    id. at 89
    (emphasis added). Consequently, neither Morrill nor Town
    of Henniker stand for the proposition that the State Constitution affords the
    right to a jury trial to a person facing a governmental action to collect a civil
    penalty that exceeds the $1,500 threshold specified in the current version of
    Part I, Article 20.5
    Likewise, we disagree with Ridlon’s argument, as well as the trial court’s
    conclusion, that the statutory claim against him can be considered equivalent
    to a common law cause of action for fraud. In Hair Excitement, we compared a
    statutory claim brought under the Consumer Protection Act with a common
    law claim for fraud or deceit. See Hair 
    Excitement, 158 N.H. at 369-70
    . After
    comparing the elements and proofs of the two claims, we concluded that the
    two actions were dissimilar. 
    Id. Here also,
    the secretary’s action against
    Ridlon is dissimilar to common law fraud in significant respects. To start, the
    Act specifically states in its definitional section that the terms “‘[f]raud,’ ‘deceit,’
    and ‘defraud’ are not limited to common law deceit.” RSA 421-B:1-102(17).
    Thus, the Act is designed to encompass a broader class of claims than the
    common law tort.
    5Ridlon’s reliance on State v. Jackson, 
    69 N.H. 511
    (1899), and East Kingston v. Towle, 
    48 N.H. 57
    (1868), to support the trial court’s decision is similarly unavailing. Jackson expressly dealt
    with the right to a jury trial under Part I, Article 15, see 
    Jackson, 69 N.H. at 512
    , and Towle dealt
    with “the right of trial in all controversies relating to property” under Part I, Article 20, see 
    Towle, 48 N.H. at 63
    .
    7
    Furthermore, the claims brought against Ridlon are readily
    distinguishable from a common law action for fraud or deceit. The claims are
    brought by the secretary to enforce compliance with the statute, see RSA 421-
    B:6-604(a), in response to financial injuries sustained by third-party clients of
    Ridlon. The secretary alleges that Ridlon violated RSA 421-B:5-502(a), which
    provides:
    It is unlawful for any person that advises others for compensation,
    either directly or indirectly or through publications or writings, as
    to the value of securities or the advisability of investing in,
    purchasing, or selling securities or that, for compensation and as
    part of a regular business, issues or promulgates analyses or
    reports relating to securities:
    (1) to employ a device, scheme, or artifice to defraud
    another person; or
    (2) to engage in an act, practice, or course of business that
    operates or would operate as a fraud or deceit upon
    another person.
    RSA 421-B:5-502(a). Therefore, the Act first requires that the offending party
    be a “person that advises others for compensation,” and that the conduct
    specifically relate to the purchase and sale of securities. 
    Id. It must
    then be
    established that the party employed “a device, scheme, or artifice,” or engaged
    “in an act, practice, or course of business” designed to defraud another. RSA
    421-B:5-502(a)(1) to (2). The above requirements must be established by a
    preponderance of the evidence. RSA 421-B:6-613(v).
    By contrast, in order to prove common law fraud or deceit, a plaintiff
    must prove that a defendant intentionally made materially false statements to
    the plaintiff, which the defendant knew to be false or which he had no
    knowledge or belief to be true, for the purpose of causing, and which did cause,
    the plaintiff reasonably to rely to his detriment. See Hair 
    Excitement, 158 N.H. at 369
    . Thus, in a common law fraud action, the party bringing the claim must
    establish that it was personally harmed by the defendant’s conduct, prove
    justifiable reliance, and “specifically allege the essential details of the fraud and
    the facts of the defendants’ fraudulent conduct.” Snierson v. Scruton, 
    145 N.H. 73
    , 77 (2000). In addition, to prevail, the plaintiff must meet the more
    demanding burden of proving fraud by clear and convincing evidence. Snow v.
    American Morgan Horse Assoc., 
    141 N.H. 467
    , 468 (1996). In short, like the
    Consumer Protection Act claim at issue in Hair Excitement, the administrative6
    6 We note that the Securities Act appears to permit the attorney general or the secretary of state to
    forgo administrative enforcement and instead initiate enforcement proceedings directly in superior
    court. See RSA 421-B:6-603. We have no occasion to consider in this case whether a person
    8
    proceeding brought against Ridlon by the secretary under the Securities Act is
    not analogous to common law fraud or deceit because it “require[s] proof of
    significantly different elements and satisfaction of a different standard of
    proof.” Hair 
    Excitement, 158 N.H. at 370
    . Accordingly, Ridlon is not entitled
    to a jury trial under Part I, Article 20 of the State Constitution.
    We do not share the dissent’s view that the comprehensiveness analysis
    outlined in Hallahan pertained only to whether there existed an implied
    statutory right to a jury trial, rather than one under the State Constitution.
    Although we acknowledge that Hallahan does not specifically indicate which
    portions of the analysis pertained to the constitutional interpretation as
    opposed to the statutory interpretation, we disagree with the dissent’s assertion
    that the discussion of the comprehensiveness of the statutory scheme in
    Hallahan applied only to the court’s statutory analysis. In fact, later cases
    have referenced and applied the framework outlined in Hallahan in the
    constitutional context. See Hair 
    Excitement, 158 N.H. at 368
    -69; Franklin
    
    Lodge, 149 N.H. at 591
    .
    Furthermore, although we agree with the dissent as to the importance of
    the jury trial right, we are bound by the law as set forth in our past cases. See
    Ford v. N.H. Dep’t of Transp., 
    163 N.H. 284
    , 290 (2012) (discussing the
    doctrine of stare decisis). Yet, if we were to adopt the dissent’s rationale, we
    would be hard pressed to understand how Hair Excitement would remain good
    law. In this regard, we note that one of the remedies provided for in the
    Consumer Protection Act is an award of $1,000 per violation, which can be
    multiplied by up to three times by the court if it determines that the
    defendant’s conduct was a willful or knowing violation of the Act. See RSA
    358-A:10, I (2009); Simpson v. Young, 
    153 N.H. 471
    , 474-75 (2006). Given
    that this recovery is allowed whether a plaintiff suffered actual damages or not,
    it seems that this remedy could easily be characterized as a “civil penalty” and
    thus subject to a jury trial under the dissent’s view. Such a ruling would
    effectively overrule Hair Excitement or, at a minimum, cast constitutional
    doubt on its continued validity.
    For the reasons stated above, we reverse the judgment of the trial court.
    Reversed.
    HICKS and BASSETT, JJ., concurred; HANTZ MARCONI, J., with whom
    DONOVAN, J., joined, dissented.
    HANTZ MARCONI, J., with whom DONOVAN, J., joins, dissenting. We
    respectfully dissent because we believe that Ridlon is entitled to a jury trial
    against whom an enforcement proceeding is commenced in superior court enjoys a right to a jury
    trial.
    9
    under Part I, Article 20 of the New Hampshire Constitution. See N.H. CONST.
    pt. I, art. 20. The State of New Hampshire, acting through the Bureau of
    Securities Regulation, seeks millions of dollars in civil penalties against Ridlon
    for alleged violations of the New Hampshire Uniform Securities Act (Act). See
    RSA ch. 421-B (2015) (amended 2017, 2018). Because the Bureau is seeking
    civil penalties in excess of $1,500 per violation in this action in debt, Ridlon
    has a right to a jury trial under Part I, Article 20. See Tull v. United States,
    
    481 U.S. 412
    , 418-19 (1987) (concluding, based on historical analysis, that
    “[a]ctions by the Government to recover civil penalties under statutory
    provisions” are “one type of action in debt” that required a jury trial at common
    law); N.H. CONST. pt. I, art. 20 (requiring “the value in controversy” to exceed
    $1,500). The Act’s failure to provide for a jury trial under such circumstances
    contravenes the protections afforded by our State Constitution. Therefore, we
    respectfully dissent from the majority opinion.
    I
    The Bureau instituted an administrative enforcement action against
    Ridlon in 2017 for conduct spanning 2007 to 2016. See RSA 421-B:6-604
    (governing administrative enforcement proceedings). Among other relief, the
    Bureau sought civil penalties under RSA 421-B:6-604(d), which authorizes the
    secretary of state to “impose a civil penalty up to a maximum of $2,500 for a
    single violation” in its final order. The Act currently limits judicial review of
    administrative enforcement actions to appeals of final orders taken to this
    court, governed by the procedures in RSA chapter 541. See RSA 421-B:6-609;
    RSA 541:6 (2007). The predecessor to the current Act provided for a de novo
    appeal to superior court when the secretary of state ordered certain kinds of
    relief, but the legislature repealed this provision in 2009.7 Compare Laws
    1994, 388:22 (enacting de novo appeal provision), with Laws 2009, 128:3
    (repealing de novo appeal provision).
    The majority focuses on whether a jury trial must be provided in an
    administrative enforcement action in the first instance, i.e., in the
    administrative proceeding itself. This focus heavily influences its conclusion
    that Ridlon has no constitutional right to a jury trial. We view the pertinent
    inquiry differently. The relevant New Hampshire authority suggests that the
    legislature can require claims for which there is a constitutional right to a jury
    trial to first be adjudicated by an administrative agency, so long as there is a
    reasonably unfettered right of appeal to a court where a jury trial can be held.
    ICS Communications v. Fitch, 
    145 N.H. 433
    , 434-35 (2000); see also Opinion of
    the Justices, 
    113 N.H. 205
    , 214 (1973); Copp v. Henniker, 
    55 N.H. 179
    , 202-03
    (1875); cf. Opinion of the Justices (DWI Jury Trials), 
    135 N.H. 538
    , 541-42
    (1992) (explaining that Part I, Article 15 of the State Constitution guarantees
    7 We did not have occasion to consider whether the de novo appeal provision required a trial by
    jury as a matter of statutory interpretation or constitutional law.
    10
    the right to a jury trial, either in the first instance or on appeal to the superior
    court, to all criminal defendants facing the possibility of incarceration).
    Acknowledging this authority, Ridlon concedes that if the Act allowed the
    aggrieved party to appeal the secretary of state’s final order in the
    administrative action to the superior court for a de novo jury trial, “there would
    be no constitutional problem” under Part I, Article 20. The Act currently
    contains no such provision, however. See RSA ch. 421-B. Therefore, the
    question we must answer is this: when the government seeks civil penalties in
    excess of $1,500 per violation in an administrative enforcement action, does
    the Act’s failure to provide an appeal to a court where a jury trial can be held
    contravene Part I, Article 20? As explained below, we believe that it does.
    II
    The jury trial “has been steadily regarded, from the earliest judicial
    history in England, as the great safeguard of the lives, liberty, and property of
    the subject against the abuses of arbitrary power, as well as against undue
    excitements of popular feeling.” Wooster v. Plymouth, 
    62 N.H. 193
    , 194 (1882)
    (quotation omitted). Indeed, “the jury is a cornerstone of our democratic
    system of government.” State v. Elbert, 
    121 N.H. 43
    , 44 (1981); see also Pena-
    Rodriguez v. Colorado, 
    137 S. Ct. 855
    , 860 (2017). The founders of this
    country viewed the right to trial by jury and the right to vote as “the heart and
    lungs, the main spring, and the center wheel” of our liberties. Letter from John
    Adams to William Pym (Jan. 27, 1766), in 1 Papers of John Adams 164, 169
    (Robert J. Taylor et al. eds., 1977).
    The constitutional right to trial by jury is “not a protection of the
    government, but a protection of the subject against the government, and of the
    weak subject against the powerful subject.” 
    Wooster, 62 N.H. at 201
    (emphasis
    added); see also East Kingston v. Towle, 
    48 N.H. 57
    , 64 (1868) (noting that
    “trial by jury [is] secured to the subject by the constitution” (emphasis added)).
    Our State Constitution guards this right “against repeal, infringement, or
    undue trammel by legislative action.” Gilman v. Lake Sunapee Props., 
    159 N.H. 26
    , 31 (2009) (quotation omitted); accord Hair Excitement v. L’Oreal
    U.S.A., 
    158 N.H. 363
    , 368 (2009).
    The right to a jury trial is enshrined in several places in the New
    Hampshire Constitution’s Bill of Rights. See N.H. CONST. pt. I, arts. 15, 16,
    20; see also 
    Wooster, 62 N.H. at 196
    , 202-03. The right to a jury trial in civil
    causes is guaranteed by Part I, Article 20, which provides:
    In all controversies concerning property, and in all suits between 2
    or more persons except those in which another practice is and has
    been customary and except those in which the value in controversy
    does not exceed $1,500 and no title to real estate is involved, the
    11
    parties have a right to a trial by jury. This method of procedure
    shall be held sacred unless, in cases arising on the high seas and
    in cases relating to mariners’ wages, the legislature shall think it
    necessary to alter it.
    N.H. CONST. pt. I, art. 20. “In those civil cases in which trial by jury is a
    constitutional right, that right is as sacred as it is in criminal cases. Its
    sacredness is not a matter of degree: it is absolute.” 
    Copp, 55 N.H. at 195
    .
    Further, our precedent “indicate[s] a strong tendency to uphold the right of
    trial by jury whenever possible.” Hampton v. Palmer, 
    99 N.H. 143
    , 146 (1954).
    In Part I, Article 20, the people of New Hampshire “reserved to
    themselves the right of jury trial, except in cases in which it has been
    heretofore otherwise used and practiced.” Daley v. Kennett, 
    75 N.H. 536
    , 537
    (1910) (quotation omitted); see State v. Saunders, 
    66 N.H. 39
    , 72 (1889)
    (explaining that “‘heretofore’ means before 1784” in the context of Part I, Article
    20).8 This constitutional provision “was a recognition of an existing right,
    guaranteeing it as it then stood and was practised”; it did not extend the right
    to trial by jury to cases that “had not before been within its benefits.” Davis v.
    Dyer, 
    62 N.H. 231
    , 235 (1882).
    “To resolve whether a party has a right to trial by jury in a particular
    action, we generally look to both the nature of the case and the relief sought,
    and ascertain whether the customary practice included a trial by jury before
    1784.” 
    Gilman, 159 N.H. at 30-31
    (quotation omitted); accord Hair 
    Excitement, 158 N.H. at 368
    ; Employers Assurance Co. v. Tibbetts, 
    96 N.H. 296
    , 298
    (1950). “[T]he cases in which it had been otherwise used and practised are
    shown by common-law principles and by history.” 
    Wooster, 62 N.H. at 203
    (citations omitted); accord 
    Daley, 75 N.H. at 537
    . “Our analysis, therefore,
    requires a historical discussion.” 
    Gilman, 159 N.H. at 31
    ; see also HSBC Bank
    USA v. MacMillan, 
    160 N.H. 375
    , 377 (2010); In re Sandra H., 
    150 N.H. 634
    ,
    636 (2004). We must be “extremely cautious in asserting, without the most
    thorough and critical examination, that a party in any case was not entitled to
    trial by jury before the adoption of the constitution.” 
    Copp, 55 N.H. at 190
    .
    In conducting the historical inquiry under Part I, Article 20, we also
    consider Part II, Article 90 of the State Constitution. See 
    Saunders, 66 N.H. at 75-76
    . Enacted in 1784, Part II, Article 90 provides in relevant part:
    8 Until 1988, Part I, Article 20 described the exception as applying to “‘cases in which it has been
    heretofore otherwise used and practiced.’” 
    Gilman, 159 N.H. at 29-30
    (quoting Laws 1788 at 12).
    In 1988, that language was changed to “those [cases] in which another practice is and has been
    customary.” N.H. CONST. pt. I, art. 20; see 
    Gilman, 159 N.H. at 29-30
    . The meaning of the
    exception, however, has not changed. See 
    Gilman, 159 N.H. at 30
    .
    12
    All the laws which have heretofore been adopted, used, and
    approved, in the province, colony, or state of New Hampshire, and
    usually practiced on in the courts of law, shall remain and be in
    full force, until altered and repealed by the legislature; such parts
    thereof only excepted, as are repugnant to the rights and liberties
    contained in this constitution . . . .
    N.H. CONST. pt. II, art. 90 (emphasis added). As used in Article 90,
    “‘heretofore’ means before 1784.” 
    Saunders, 66 N.H. at 72
    .
    “The English common law, modified by American conditions, is one of the
    laws which have heretofore been adopted, used, and approved in the province
    of New Hampshire and usually practised on in the courts.” 
    Id. at 73
    (quotation
    and ellipsis omitted). This body of common law continued “in force here upon
    the organization of the provincial government” in the 1600s, State v. Albee, 
    61 N.H. 423
    , 426-27 (1881), and remained in effect after 1784 by virtue of Part II,
    Article 90 so long as it was not “repugnant to the rights and liberties contained
    in [our] constitution,” N.H. CONST. pt. II, art. 90; see State v. Santamaria, 
    169 N.H. 722
    , 724-25 (2017). The historical discussion in this case therefore
    begins with English common law.
    “Jury trial was an established right of British subjects long before the
    earliest settlement of this state.” 
    Wooster, 62 N.H. at 194
    (quotation omitted).
    In our own country, almost from its earliest settlement, the trial by
    jury was claimed by the people as the birthright of Englishmen,
    and as the most valuable of the rights of freemen; and in the great
    struggle which secured our national independence, no right of the
    colonists was more urgently and strenuously insisted upon.
    Opinion of Justices, 
    41 N.H. 550
    , 550-51 (1860); accord 
    Wooster, 62 N.H. at 194
    . Indeed, the colonists were “full of the English passion for trial by jury,
    intensified, if possible, by their experience in this country.” 
    Gilman, 159 N.H. at 31
    (quotation omitted); accord 
    Copp, 55 N.H. at 187
    .
    “At common law, suits for civil penalties were tried as actions for debt,
    and actions for debt were triable before a jury.” State v. Credit Bureau of
    Laredo, Inc., 
    530 S.W.2d 288
    , 292 (Tex. 1975); see also Grossblatt v. Wright,
    
    239 P.2d 19
    , 26 (Cal. Dist. Ct. App. 1951) (noting that “[a] jury trial was a
    matter of right in the common-law action of debt”); cf. Woart v. Winnick, 
    3 N.H. 473
    , 481 (1826) (“[A]n action of debt to recover a penalty is a civil cause.”). As
    relevant here, “[a]ctions by the Government to recover civil penalties under
    statutory provisions . . . historically have been viewed as one type of action in
    debt requiring trial by jury.” 
    Tull, 481 U.S. at 418-19
    .9 Thus, the available
    9   While we agree with the majority that this court must be circumspect in relying on case law that
    13
    historical evidence supports Ridlon’s position that the Bureau’s action to
    recover civil penalties against him pursuant to the Act renders this an action in
    debt, for which there was a right to a jury trial at common law.
    The common law right to a jury trial continued in force in New
    Hampshire through and after 1784 via Part II, Article 90, as part of the existing
    body of laws. See 
    Saunders, 66 N.H. at 75-76
    . Unlike other areas of common
    law, however, this right was withheld from the legislative power of alteration
    and repeal by the jury trial provisions in the State Constitution’s Bill of Rights.
    See 
    id. Therefore, the
    law concerning the right to trial by jury for actions in
    debt, “brought to this country by the first settlers, is in force so far as it had
    not been altered by usage or legislation before 1784.” 
    Id. at 75.
    The Bureau has not identified any authority that suggests the common
    law right to a jury trial for actions in debt changed prior to the adoption of the
    New Hampshire Constitution. See Nationwide Biweekly Admin., Inc. v.
    Superior Court, 
    234 Cal. Rptr. 3d 468
    , 479 (Ct. App.), review granted, 
    426 P.3d 302
    (Cal. 2018); Gallo v. Traina, 
    166 N.H. 737
    , 740 (2014) (appealing party has
    the burden of demonstrating reversible error). Additionally, the available
    historical evidence indicates that, both before and after 1784, English common
    law treated civil penalty suits as actions in debt that required trial by jury. See
    
    Tull, 481 U.S. at 418
    . Given the importance of the jury trial right in the
    founding of this country, it is fair to say that “[m]en who had enjoyed [the right
    to trial by jury for actions in debt] under the British crown would not be likely
    to surrender it after engaging in an exhaustive war for seven years to establish
    their independence.” 
    Albee, 61 N.H. at 427-28
    . Indeed, “the right of trial by
    jury was held in such esteem by the colonists that its deprivation at the hands
    of the English was one of the important grievances leading to the break with
    England.” Parklane Hosiery Co. v. Shore, 
    439 U.S. 322
    , 340 (1979) (Rehnquist,
    J., dissenting). Accordingly, we conclude that the nature of the case here — an
    action in debt by the government for civil penalties pursuant to a statute —
    supports the existence of a right to trial by jury under Part I, Article 20. See
    
    Gilman, 159 N.H. at 30-31
    .
    The nature of the relief requested — specifically, the civil penalties
    sought under RSA 421-B:6-604(d) — further supports the existence of a right
    to a jury trial under Part I, Article 20. See 
    id. A “civil
    penalty” is “[a] fine
    assessed for a violation of a statute or regulation.” Black’s Law Dictionary
    1313 (10th ed. 2014); see also Ellett Bros., Inc. v. U.S. Fidelity & Guar. Co.,
    
    275 F.3d 384
    , 388 (4th Cir. 2001) (stating that “civil penalties” are “fines or
    interprets the Seventh Amendment to the United States Constitution, reliance on decisions from
    federal and other state courts with respect to matters of historical fact is entirely appropriate.
    See, e.g., Nationwide Biweekly Admin., Inc. v. Superior Court, 
    234 Cal. Rptr. 3d 468
    , 479-80 (Ct.
    App.), review granted, 
    426 P.3d 302
    (Cal. 2018). Indeed, “Tull’s discussion of the historical legal
    facts establishing the types of actions triable by jury at common law is highly pertinent to the
    instant case.” 
    Id. at 479.
    14
    assessments payable to the government”). “A civil penalty was a type of remedy
    at common law that could only be enforced in courts of law.” 
    Tull, 481 U.S. at 422
    . Thus, the nature of the relief authorized by the civil penalty provision of
    RSA 421-B:6-604 “was traditionally available only in a court of law.” 
    Id. at 423;
    see RSA 421-B:6-604(d) (authorizing the secretary of state to “impose a
    civil penalty up to a maximum of $2,500 for a single violation” of the Act).
    “[C]ourts of common law . . . proceed to the trial of contested facts by means of
    a jury.” 
    Saunders, 66 N.H. at 76
    (quotation omitted). Consequently, “a
    government action seeking civil penalties” such as those contained in RSA 421-
    B:6-604(d) “is the kind of case that, under the historic English common law,
    would have been tried in the courts of law and as to which” Ridlon has a right
    to a jury trial. Nationwide Biweekly 
    Admin., 234 Cal. Rptr. 3d at 480-81
    .
    The final consideration is whether the amount in controversy exceeds the
    $1,500 threshold of Part I, Article 20. See N.H. CONST. pt. I, art. 20. The Act
    provides that “the secretary of state may impose a civil penalty up to a
    maximum of $2,500 for a single violation” in an administrative enforcement
    action. RSA 421-B:6-604(d). Because the maximum penalty per violation
    exceeds $1,500, the amount in controversy requirement is met. Cf. Town of
    Henniker v. Homo, 
    136 N.H. 88
    , 89-90 (1992) (assuming that state
    constitutional right to jury trial applied to zoning enforcement action seeking
    civil fines in superior court, amount in controversy requirement was not met
    where zoning ordinance limited maximum fine to $100 per violation).
    In conclusion, because the government, i.e., the Bureau, seeks civil
    penalties pursuant to statute in excess of $1,500 per violation, both the nature
    of the case and the nature of the relief sought support the conclusion that
    Ridlon has a right to a jury trial under Part I, Article 20 of the New Hampshire
    Constitution. Because the Act does not provide an avenue of appeal to a court
    where the jury trial right can be exercised, the administrative enforcement
    proceeding seeking civil penalties against Ridlon violates Part I, Article 20.
    III
    Instead of addressing whether the administrative enforcement action
    constitutes an action in debt, the majority rests its analysis upon the premise
    that the comprehensiveness of the statutory scheme determines the existence
    and scope of the constitutional right to trial by jury under Part I, Article 20. A
    careful review of our case law demonstrates that the reference to statutes’
    comprehensive nature originated in dicta in Franklin Lodge of Elks v. Marcoux,
    
    149 N.H. 581
    , 591 (2003), and resurfaced in Hair 
    Excitement, 158 N.H. at 368
    .
    Our vast body of Part I, Article 20 jurisprudence demonstrates that these
    statements in Franklin Lodge and Hair Excitement were isolated departures
    from our well-settled constitutional inquiry, under which we consider “whether
    the controversy was one that was resolved by a jury at the time of the
    constitution’s adoption” in 1784. 
    Gilman, 159 N.H. at 30
    . Accordingly, unlike
    15
    our colleagues, we believe that the comprehensive nature of the Act does not
    determine whether Ridlon has a constitutional right to a civil jury trial in this
    matter.
    For at least a century, we have consistently described the pertinent
    inquiry under Part I, Article 20 in language referencing the nature of the case
    and the nature of the relief sought. See, e.g., 
    Daley, 75 N.H. at 540
    ; Employers
    
    Assurance, 96 N.H. at 298
    ; 
    Palmer, 99 N.H. at 145
    ; 
    Gilman, 159 N.H. at 30-31
    .
    In Daley, for example, we stated: “The nature of the case and of the relief
    sought must be looked to for the settlement of the constitutional question.”
    
    Daley, 75 N.H. at 540
    . We have also maintained that “[t]he extent of the right
    to trial by jury is settled by ascertaining how it was used and practiced before
    1784.” Hallahan v. Riley, 
    94 N.H. 338
    , 339 (1947) (quotations omitted); accord
    Douglas v. Company, 
    81 N.H. 371
    , 374 (1924).
    Prior to 2003, we had never indicated that the comprehensive nature of a
    statutory scheme had any bearing on the constitutional question of whether
    there was a right to a jury trial under Part I, Article 20. See Franklin 
    Lodge, 149 N.H. at 591
    -92. Indeed, in Hallahan, we resolved the constitutional issue
    by relying on the rule that “a guaranty of trial by jury cannot be invoked in
    special, statutory or summary proceedings unknown to the common law.”
    
    Hallahan, 94 N.H. at 339-40
    .
    We also examined in Hallahan whether a statutory right to trial by jury
    “c[ould] be fairly implied” from the provision that governed appeals to the
    superior court from the “Appeal Tribunal of the [Bureau of Labor’s]
    Unemployment Compensation Division.” Id.; see 
    id. at 339
    (“Since the statute
    does not expressly provide for trial by jury, plaintiffs can prevail only if it can
    be fairly implied or it is required by virtue of the state constitution.” (emphasis
    added)). In conducting the statutory analysis, we observed that “[t]he
    procedure for filing and obtaining unemployment compensation benefits is
    comprehensive and designed to facilitate a simple and speedy determination of
    benefit claims.” 
    Id. at 340.
    We concluded that the “elaborate procedure for
    administrative and judicial review provided by the statute militates against any
    implication of a trial by jury,” and thus, as a matter of statutory interpretation,
    “the appellants [were] not entitled to a trial by jury” in their appeal to the
    superior court. 
    Id. Our use
    of the phrase “implication of a trial by jury,” 
    id. (emphasis added),
    signaled that this sentence concerned our analysis of
    whether a jury trial “c[ould] be fairly implied” from the statute, not whether it
    was “required by virtue of the state constitution,” 
    id. at 339
    (emphasis added).
    More than fifty years after we decided Hallahan, we relied on the
    statutory portion of our analysis in that case to support a new proposition
    regarding the constitutional right to a jury trial:
    16
    When a plaintiff seeks relief for breach of codified rights, we further
    consider the comprehensive nature of the statutory framework to
    determine whether the jury trial right extends to the action. See
    Hallahan v. Riley, 
    94 N.H. 338
    , 340 (1947) (elaborate procedure for
    administrative and judicial review provided by unemployment
    compensation statute militates against any implication of a trial by
    jury).
    Franklin 
    Lodge, 149 N.H. at 591
    . We did not explain why the constitutional
    right to a jury trial should depend on whether the statutory scheme at issue is
    comprehensive. See 
    id. at 591-92.
    More importantly, however, the foregoing
    statement in Franklin Lodge is dicta because we did not analyze the merits of
    the appellant’s argument that it had a right to trial by jury under Part I, Article
    20. See id.; see, e.g., In re Search Warrant for Records of AT&T, 
    170 N.H. 111
    ,
    115 (2017) (holding that certain language in a prior case was “dicta” and,
    therefore, “not controlling” because those “comments were unnecessary to the
    decision”); State v. Burris, 
    170 N.H. 802
    , 810-11 (2018). Instead we stated
    that the appellant had failed to address aspects of our state constitutional
    inquiry, and “[w]ithout adequate appellate argument, we decline[d] to address
    the [appellant]’s argument any further.” Franklin 
    Lodge, 149 N.H. at 592
    .
    Therefore, Franklin Lodge is not binding precedent on the issue before this
    court. See, e.g., 
    AT&T, 170 N.H. at 115
    .
    Although we repeated the aforementioned dicta in Hair Excitement and
    observed that the statutory scheme at issue was “comprehensive,” Hair
    
    Excitement, 158 N.H. at 368
    (quotation omitted), our holding did not appear to
    turn on that observation, see 
    id. Accordingly, these
    statements in Hair
    Excitement can also be classified as dicta. See, e.g., Arcam Pharmaceutical
    Corp. v. Faria, 
    513 F.3d 1
    , 3 (1st Cir. 2007) (“Dictum is superfluous content —
    ‘an assertion in a court’s opinion of a proposition of law which does not explain
    why the court’s judgment goes in favor of the winner.’” (quoting Pierre N. Leval,
    Judging Under the Constitution: Dicta About Dicta, 81 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 1249,
    1256 (2006))).
    The doctrine of stare decisis does not compel us to perpetuate dicta, see,
    e.g., 
    AT&T, 170 N.H. at 115
    ; 
    Burris, 170 N.H. at 810-11
    , and we would decline
    to do so in this case. Indeed, “[i]t is a fundamental rule of that doctrine that a
    decision is not authority for what is said in the opinion but only for the points
    actually involved and actually decided.” Childers v. Childers, 
    168 P.2d 218
    ,
    221 (Cal. Dist. Ct. App. 1946) (emphasis omitted). Thus, while the majority
    appears to view its decision as compelled by stare decisis, we disagree. In our
    view, the comprehensiveness of the Act is not a basis for concluding, as the
    majority does, that Ridlon has no right to a jury trial under the State
    Constitution.
    17
    We believe that the existence of the state constitutional right to trial by
    jury should be determined by relying on the well-settled legal principles
    established by our Part I, Article 20 jurisprudence. The comprehensiveness of
    the statutory scheme is not germane to the considerations we have identified
    as relevant to our inquiry under Part I, Article 20. By contrast, the nature of
    the case and the nature of the relief sought are relevant to whether the action
    would have been tried in a court of law, which had jury trials, or a court of
    equity, which did not, at the time of the State Constitution’s adoption. See
    
    Saunders, 66 N.H. at 76
    . Thus, the nature of the case and the nature of the
    relief sought bear upon whether the customary practice in 1784 included a
    jury trial. The comprehensive nature of the statutory framework sheds no
    such light on the inquiry of whether a right to trial by jury existed in 1784.
    Accordingly, considering the comprehensive nature of the statutory scheme
    does not assist in “the settlement of the constitutional question.” 
    Daley, 75 N.H. at 540
    .
    Furthermore, elevating comprehensiveness to the forefront of the
    analysis, as the majority does here, suggests that the nature of the case and
    the nature of the relief sought are less important than the existence of a
    comprehensive statutory scheme, out of which the claim at issue arises. In
    effect, this approach allows the legislature to “nullify the [c]onstitutional right
    of trial by jury by mere statutory enactments. It is by such methods that
    courts lose their power to enforce the Bill of Rights.” 
    Grossblatt, 239 P.2d at 27
    (quotation omitted). The legislature, however, “cannot, under pretence of
    regulating, injuriously limit or restrain” the constitutional right to a civil jury
    trial. 
    Copp, 55 N.H. at 194
    . Indeed, “the constitutional guaranty of trial by
    jury puts a plain limitation upon legislative power.” 
    Id. at 202.
    “If trial by jury
    be regarded as in many cases expensive, inconvenient, and behind the
    intelligence of the age, that may show that the constitution requires
    amendment, but it cannot be amended by an act of the legislature or a decision
    of the court.”10 
    Id. at 209.
    “A constitutional right, inconvenient in the highest
    degree, is as sacred as the most convenient one.” 
    Id. at 206.
    “It is one of the
    rights not surrendered by the people when they formed themselves into a state,
    and by its reservation they exempted themselves from the authority of the
    government they created to abridge it.” State v. Almy, 
    67 N.H. 274
    , 280 (1892).
    IV
    In sum, we believe that Ridlon has a right to a jury trial under Part I,
    Article 20 of the New Hampshire Constitution because the Bureau is seeking
    10It is worth noting that, on multiple occasions, the citizens of New Hampshire have rejected
    amendments to Part I, Article 20 that would limit the scope of its protections by increasing the
    amount in controversy requirement. See Lawrence Friedman, The New Hampshire State
    Constitution 88 (2d ed. 2015). The voters did so in 1984, for example, “despite the argument
    made by proponents of the change that [the proposed increase to $5,000] was needed to reduce
    the growing backlog in superior court cases.” 
    Id. 18 civil
    penalties in excess of $1,500 per violation of the New Hampshire Uniform
    Securities Act. See RSA 421-B:6-604(d). Therefore, the Act’s failure to provide
    an avenue of appeal to a court where trial by jury can be held violates our State
    Constitution.
    Given our conclusion, we need not address the Bureau’s argument that
    the other forms of relief it sought constitute equitable remedies for which there
    is no right to trial by jury. Cf. McElroy v. Gaffney, 
    129 N.H. 382
    , 386 (1987)
    (plurality opinion) (recognizing that there is no right to a jury trial under Part I,
    Article 20 in “purely equitable proceedings,” but noting that the right is not lost
    where equitable and legal claims are joined in the same action).
    We also do not reach the issue of whether the action “is in essence one
    for common law fraud.” However, we have misgivings about whether Hair
    Excitement comports with our state constitutional framework. See Hair
    
    Excitement, 158 N.H. at 369-70
    (holding that Consumer Protection Act claim
    brought in private action was not “analogous to” claim for common law fraud or
    deceit, based upon differences in elements and burdens of proof). As a result,
    we believe that the majority’s use of Hair Excitement as a template for
    addressing the fraud argument, while understandable, risks extending an
    analysis that is untethered from our established framework under Part I,
    Article 20. In the discharge of our duty to construe and uphold the New
    Hampshire Constitution, this court must be vigilant in ensuring that
    questionable precedent “be not extended by mere analogy to a different case if
    the result will be to weaken or subvert” our constitutional principles. Dimick v.
    Schiedt, 
    293 U.S. 474
    , 485 (1935). While the issue must wait for another day,
    parties in future cases would be wise to address how our analysis of the fraud
    argument in Hair Excitement can be reconciled with the historical inquiry
    required under Part I, Article 20 of our State Constitution.
    For all of the foregoing reasons, we respectfully dissent from the majority
    opinion.
    19