We consider an issue of increasing importance to the federal courts and to non-tribal members who live or work in or around Native American reservations: When does an Indian tribe’s civil jurisdiction extend to non-tribal members? We must decide whether the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes of the Flathead Reservation had the adjudicative authority to exercise civil subject-matter jurisdiction over a non-tribal member in a tort dispute that arose from a traffic accident on a public highway on the reservation.
I
This case arises from a tragic one-vehicle rollover. Appellant Smith, a citizen of Oregon, a member of the Umatilla Tribe, and a student at the Salish Kootenai College (“SKC”), was that day driving a SKC dump truck on United States Highway 93 as it ran through the Flathead Reservation. Smith was driving as part of his work on a vocational course at SKC. At the unfortunate time, the dump truck’s right rear main leaf spring broke, and the truck veered sharply left. Smith tried to maintain control, but the truck rolled. The accident killed one passenger, and injured Smith and another passenger.
After the accident, the injured passenger and the estate of the deceased passenger brought suits against Smith and SKC in tribal court. Smith and SKC cross-claimed against each other. All claims were resolved before trial, save Smith’s cross-claim against SKC. That cross-claim alleged that SKC was liable for the accident and also asserted a claim of spoliation of evidence. At trial in tribal court on these claims a jury rendered a verdict in favor of SKC.
Smith then sought post-judgment relief with the tribal trial court on the theory that the tribal court lacked jurisdiction over his claim. At the same time, he filed an appeal of the judgment with the tribal appeals court. The Court of Appeals of the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes of the Flathead Reservation remanded the ease for a ruling from the tribal trial court on the jurisdiction question. Upon remand, the tribal trial court decided that it had jurisdiction. Smith again appealed the tribal trial court’s judgment to the tribal appellate court. While that second tribal court appeal was pending, Smith filed his federal court action, which is now before us, in the United States District Court for the District of *1051 Montana. Smith, in Ms federal suit, sought an injunction against the tribal courts on the theory that the tribal courts lacked jurisdiction over his cross-claim, and he also sought to litigate his underlying claims against SKC.
On February 17, 2003, the tribal appellate court issued an opinion affirming the tribal trial court. The tribal appellate court concluded that “[f]or purposes of determining jurisdiction, [SKC] must be treated as a tribal entity.”
On March 3, 2003, the federal district court issued its order on jurisdiction. The district court found that SKC was a tribal entity for jurisdictional purposes and that Smith’s claims arose on the reservation. Then, relying solely on
Williams v. Lee,
II
As we begin our analysis,
1
we first express and define the legal principles that govern a tribe’s exercise of civil jurisdiction over a non-member such as Smith. Any time a tribal court wishes to exercise civil subject matter jurisdiction over a nonmember of the tribe,
2
the framework in
Montana v. United States,
Montana sets the framework of a general rule and two exceptions:
[A]bsent a different congressional direction, Indian tribes lack civil authority over the conduct of non-members on non-Indian land within a reservation, subject to two exceptions: The first exception relates to nonmembers who enter consensual relationships with the tribe or its members; the second concerns activity that directly affects the tribe’s political integrity, economic security, health, or welfare.
Strate,
For the purposes of invoking and satisfying Montana’s pathmaking principles, the important variable is that there is a non-member of the tribe that is party to the specific claim being litigated. In the case before us, where it is not disputed that Smith is a non-member of the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes, it does not matter whether SKC is a non-member, and it also does not matter whether the action arose on tribal land. Montana applies in any event because Smith is not a member, and that fact alone impels the need for scrutiny of tribal court jurisdiction under the principles set by Montana.
In reiterating that
Montana
analysis applies whenever a party to a claim is a nonmember, we reject the argument that
Williams v. Lee,
Most courts addressing jurisdiction in cases where a party is a non-member have reached the same result, applying the
Montana
framework even when the underlying claim arose on tribal land.
See, e.g., Bank One, N.A. v. Brainard,
144
*1053
F.Supp.2d 640, 642-44 (S.D.Miss.2001) (holding that non-member plaintiff had to exhaust tribal remedies in a suit to compel arbitration because of a colorable claim of consensual relationship under
Montana
with the member defendant);
Rodriguez v. Wong,
Because “the general rule of
Montana
applies to both Indian and non-Indian land” whenever a non-member is a party to a claim litigated in tribal court,
Hicks,
Ill
Because the
Montana
framework applies to resolution of non-member Smith’s claim in tribal court, we are required to start with a presumption that the tribal court did not have jurisdiction.
Atkinson Trading Co. v. Shirley,
Our Ninth Circuit cases give the same guidance. If the plaintiff is a tribal member, the defendant a non-member, and the action arises on non-tribal lands, we routinely have held that the tribal courts lack jurisdiction.
See, e.g., Boxx v. Long Warrior,
A
Ancillary to examining the Montana exceptions, and given Smith’s non-member status, the Supreme Court and the Ninth Circuit cases cited above highlight two relevant variables for analyzing tribal court jurisdiction: Whether SKC is a member of *1054 the tribe and where the claims arose. 6 Neither of these variables is alone controlling, but the answers are relevant to determining if any Montana exception applies.
1
To ascertain whether SKC is a member or non-member of the tribe for tribal jurisdiction purposes, we would normally determine SKC’s status as to whether it is a tribal entity. In other words, we would ask whether SKC operates as an arm of the tribe.
In this case, however, we hesitate without necessity to make an important pronouncement on SKC’s status as a tribal member, which may have implications for it or the state external to our case. The record for such a decision if made now would necessarily be based solely on the limited evidence presented by President McDonald’s affidavit. If it were necessary to remand for determination on this issue of SKC’s status as a tribal entity, we would expect the district court to develop a more complete factual record to resolve this type of question. However, we have determined that regardless of SKC’s status, we can resolve the case before us. Whether SKC is a tribal member vel non does not affect our ultimate determination on tribal court jurisdiction, because, as we explain below, even if we were to view SKC as a tribal member, we would still find that the tribal courts lacked jurisdiction over Smith’s claims against SKC. For purposes of our Montana analysis, we will assume, but we do not decide, that SKC is a tribal member.
2
We next address where the claims arose. There are two claims by Smith in this case: (1) negligence and products liability and (2) spoliation of evidence. The parties contest where each claim arose.
a
The negligence/products liability claim arose on U.S. Highway 93. This is non-tribal land.
See Red Wolf,
Both Montana law and tribal law conform to the understanding that a tort claim cannot arise until all of the elements of the tort (including damages) are present.
See Gabriel v. School Dist. No. 4,
The Appellees’ arguments to the contrary are unavailing. Appellees in essence urge that if the dump truck was negligently maintained, that necessarily must have occurred on tribal land. But even if much, or even most, of the negligent maintenance behavior transpired on the reservation, that would not provide a definitive answer for where the claim arose when Smith’s dump truck rolled.
Cf. Sosa v. Alvarez-Machain,
— U.S. -,
Adopting Appellees’ argument is foreclosed by our precedent. In
McDonald,
b .
For the spoliation of evidence, the legal framework is much the same: The action arises where the last necessary predicate act for the tort is complete. The resolution of this question, however, is less clear because it is not certain from the record where the evidence was allegedly destroyed. The district court assumed that “such conduct occurred at SKC.” It is one thing to assume facts, make the best case for a party, and show why that case is insufficient for tribal jurisdiction, but it is another to assume facts in order to hold, as here, that a tribal court
had
subject matter jurisdiction. The former is permissible judicial reasoning; the latter is generally not correct in law, because the party asserting tribal jurisdiction has the burden of proving all facts necessary for tribal jurisdiction.
Strate,
B
With the two assumptions that we have identified, viewing SKC as a tribal entity 7 and viewing the spoliation claim, but not the negligence claim, as arising on the reservation, we now consider the two Montana exceptions.
1
Montana’s
first exception “covers activities of non-members who enter consensual relationships with the tribe or its members, through commercial dealing, contracts, leases, or other arrangements.”
Strate,
In this case, the only apparent
8
qualifying relationship is Smith’s status as a student of SKC. Smith argues that his status as a student of SKC does not automatically imply the necessary consensual relationship. “A nonmember’s consensual relationship in one area thus does not trigger tribal civil authority in another — it is not in for a penny, in for a Pound.”
Atkinson Trading Co.,
If Smith was injured by an SKC agent while off-campus and Smith merely happened to be a student of SKC, then in our view the consensual relationship between Smith and SKC would not be a sufficient nexus for the tribal court to assert jurisdiction. The facts of this case, however, differ. Smith was driving the dump truck as part of the vocational training provided by SKC, and one of the passengers of the truck may have been actually instructing Smith at the time of the accident. It could be argued that the accident arose in Smith’s capacity as a student of SKC, and Smith would not have been in the dump truck apart from his course.
On the other hand, there is a strong rejoinder. In
County of Lewis,
a tribe member brought an action against a county sheriffs deputy for a tort allegedly committed on the reservation.
This interpretation of “on-reservation” activity has prevailed in our circuit. In
Stump,
we narrowly construed the first
Montana
exception in the context of a bad faith insurance claim.
If we were to accept SKC’s argument that tribal jurisdiction over tort actions arises from the consensual student relationship in and of itself, that would have broad and undue implications for thousands of college students. If SKC wants its students to consent to tribal court jurisdiction on any dispute with it, it may ask them to so agree in connection with the enrollment process, and with a fair disclosure. Having failed to do that, SKC cannot argue that the Montana exception for a consensual relationship should be implied in a tort action from the student relationship alone.
We hold that the Smith’s negligence claim arose not from Smith’s consensual contractual relationship as a student at SKC, but from separate duties that SKC owed Smith, which duties were derived not from contract but from Montana tort law. Following Stump, we hold that no qualifying commercial relationship existed with respect to the tort actions. The first Montana exception does not apply to the negligence claim in this case. 10
We take a similar approach in our analysis of the spoliation claim. It also does not arise from the consensual contractual relationship between Smith and SKC relating to Smith’s plan to be educated at the college. Spoliation of evi
*1058
dence is a tort that by its nature depends on the existence of another separate claim. Under Montana law, the tort of spoliation of evidence (whether intentional or negligent) requires “the existence of a potential lawsuit.”
Oliver v. Stimson Lumber Co.,
2
The second
Montana
exception concerns conduct that “threatens or has some direct effect on the political integrity, the economic security, or the health or welfare of the tribe.”
“The exception is only triggered by
nonmember conduct
that threatens the Indian tribe; it does not broadly permit the exercise of civil authority whenever it might be considered ‘necessary’ to self-government.”
Atkinson Trading Co.,
The tribe argues, however, that its interest in “maintaining public safety” is met here. We reject the tribe’s argument. If a vague assertion of “public safety” were good enough for this exception and
“Montana’s
second exception require[d] no more, the exception would severely shrink the rule.”
Strate,
The tribe also argues that adjudication over an arm of the tribe would erode the “political integrity” of the tribe. This argument also fails. It is undisputed that SKC is a Montana non-profit corpora
*1059
tion and can be sued in that capacity, thus it can be fairly said that any political integrity risk was created by the tribe. Even if the tribe did not itself create this risk, the tribe does not explain how its integrity will be eroded by permitting this tort litigation to proceed in federal court. A suit against SKC in federal court does not impinge upon the interests of the tribe in the way that motivates the second
Montana
exception. Smith’s claims present a simple tort case and nothing more. To qualify for the second
Montana
exception, Smith’s action would have to endanger tribal integrity,
Atkinson Trading Co.,
Even if SKC is assumed to be a member of the tribe, and even if the spoliation claim arose on tribal land, the second Montana exception does not apply to either the negligence claim or the spoliation claim.
IV
We conclude that, because Smith is a non-member of the Confederated Salish and Kootenai Tribes of the Flathead Reservation, the tribal courts could only exercise civil jurisdiction over Smith if one of the two Montana exceptions applies. Because neither exception applies, we hold that the tribal court lacked civil jurisdiction over Smith’s claims against SKC. We reverse and remand the case for the district court to consider Smith’s claims on their merits.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. We review the tribe's subject matter jurisdiction de novo.
FMC v. Shoshone-Bannock Tribes,
. "Non-members” include non-Indians and Indians who are members of other tribes.
See Nevada
v.
Hicks,
. A tribal court's adjudicative authority is, at most, only as broad as the tribe's regulatory authority.
Hides,
. SKC responds that
McDonald v. Means,
. The Supreme Court has not distinguished between non-member plaintiffs and nonmember defendants.
See Hicks,
.
Hicks
suggests that where the action arose is only a factor in the
Montana
analysis.
. As a preliminary matter, if SKC were to be determined to be a non-member of the tribes, then it is settled that the tribal court had no jurisdiction because both parties are nonmembers and the events arose on non-tribal land, providing no purchase for either of the
Montana
exceptions.
See, e.g., Hicks,
. It may be argued that by filing the cross-claim, Smith consented to jurisdiction. We reject this theory, because Smith was required to exhaust his remedies in tribal court.
Strate,
.
Stump
holds that a party generally cannot sue in federal court to block tribal court jurisdiction until first exhausting remedies in tribal court including a tribal court appeal in which the question of jurisdiction may be raised; federal courts generally should not intervene before tribal appellate review is completed.
.
Williams v. Lee,
. Similarly, the spoliation claim does not trigger the second Montana exception: Destruction of evidence from a mere traffic accident does not sufficiently jeopardize the integrity or existence of the tribe for the second Montana exception to apply.
