[¶ 1] John Doe, (a pseudonym), appeals from an order denying his motion to vacate a 1989 amended judgment which established Doe as the father of a child born to Jane Roe, (a pseudonym), and required him to pay child support. We affirm.
I
[¶ 2] Jane Roe is a member of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe of the Standing Rock Sioux Reservation, and John Doe is a member of Three Affiliated Tribes of the Fort Berthold Reservation. In 1987, Roe and Doe began living together in an apartment in Grand Forks, North Dakota. On November 2, 1988, Roe gave birth to a child in Grand Forks, North Dakota. On November 7, 1988, Doe signed an acknowledgment of paternity of the child. In early 1989, Roe and Doe ceased living together. On May 17, 1989, Roe brought an action in district court to establish paternity, custody, and child support.
[¶ 3] In August of 1989, Roe and Doe entered into a stipulation that Doe was the father of the child born to Roe and that Doe pay $75.00 per month in child support. The stipulation was submitted to the district court for incorporation into the judgment. In October of 1991, the amended judgment was transcribed to Grand Forks County. In November of 1993, Doe’s child support obligation was increased to $133.00 per month. In December of 1993, the judgment was transcribed to Burleigh County.
[¶ 4] In June of 1999, a motion to increase Doe’s child support obligation was filed. In July of 1999, Doe stipulated that if genetic testing showed he was the father of the child he would pay $1064.00 per month in child support. Genetic testing showed a 99.87 percent probability that Doe could not be excluded as the father of the child. In March of 2000, the judgment was amended to reflect that Doe was required to pay $1,064.00 per month in child support. In June of 2000, Doe was found in contempt for failure to pay child support.
[¶ 5] In October of 2001, approximately twelve years after the entry of the judgment, Doe filed a N.D.R.CivJP 60(b)(iv) *568 motion to vacate the amended judgment entered on August 31, 1989. Doe argued the amended judgment was void because the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction to enter it. Doe argued the trial court lacked subject matter jurisdiction because, at the time the paternity action was filed, the legal residence of Roe and the child was Standing Rock Sioux Reservation. He further argued that, at the time the action was filed, he was a member of Three Affiliated Tribes and a legal resident of the Fort Berthold Reservation, but was living off the reservation to attend school in Grand Forks, North Dakotа. Doe contended in an affidavit he did not know, the place of conception. Neither Doe nor Roe requested an evidentiary hearing, and the motion was submitted on the record, briefs, exhibits and affidavits. The trial court denied Doe’s motion, and Doe appealed the court’s January 3, 2002 order.
II
[¶ 6] Our standard of review for motions under Rule 60(b)(iv) is plenary.
See First Western Bank & Trust v. Wickman,
Ill
[¶ 7] “[T]he determination of the parentage of a child of Indian tribal members is intimately connected with the right of reservation Indians to make their own laws and be ruled by them.”
McKenzie County Social Service Bd. v. C.G.,
[¶ 8] There are two categories of claims over which the United States Supreme Court has held tribal courts have exclusive civil jurisdiction under the infringement test. Included in the first category are those claims in which a non-Indian asserts a claim against an Indian for conduct occurring on that Indian’s reservation.
See Williams,
[¶ 9] In
McKenzie County Social Services Bd. v. V.G.,
we held a tribal court had exclusive civil jurisdiction over a paternity claim where: (1) the mother, the child, and the alleged father were all members of Three Affiliated Tribes of the Fort Berthold Reservation; (2). the child lived with her mother on Fort Berthold Reservation at the time the paternity claim was filed; and (3) there was nothing in the record to contradict the alleged father’s
*570
assertion that the alleged paternity occurred on Fort Berthold Reservation.
[¶ 10] In In re we held a state court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over a paternity claim where: (1) the mother, the children, and the alleged father were all members of the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians; (2) the mother was employed on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation and intended to move there with the children; (3) the alleged father resided on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation at all times relevant to the paternity action; and (4) the uncontradicted testimony of the father was that the alleged conception took place on the Turtle Mountain Indian Reservation. See 529 N.W.2d at 185. Under these circumstances, we concluded the mother’s residency off the reservation for sеveral years and the alleged father’s off-reservation employment were insufficient to overcome the danger that state court jurisdiction over the paternity action would pose to the tribe’s right of self-government. See id. at 186.
[¶ 11] In
McKenzie County Social Service Bd. v. C.G.,
we held a trial court properly granted the defendant’s motion to vacate a paternity judgment where: (1) the mother, the alleged father, and the child were all members of Three Affiliated Tribes of the Fort Berthold Reservation; (2) the mother and the alleged father lived on Fort Berthold Reservation at the time the child was conceived; and (3) conception took place on Fort Berthold Reservation.
See
[¶ 12] Two common threads running through
McKenzie County Social Services Bd. v. V.G., In re M.L.M.,
and
McKenzie County Social Service Bd. v. C.G.
are the mother, the alleged father, and the child were all members of the same Indian tribe and the conduct giving rise to the paternity action occurred on that tribe’s reservation. “[T]he determination of the parentage of a child of Indian tribal members is intimately connected with the right of reservation Indians to make their own laws and be ruled by them.”
McKenzie County Social Service Bd. v. C.G.,
[¶ 13] In contrast to
McKenzie County Social Services Bd. v. V.G., In re M.L.M.,
and
McKenzie County Social Service Bd. v. C.G.,
the parties in this case are not members of the same Indian tribe. In this case, it is undisputed that at the time the paternity action was filed, Doe was a member of Three Affiliated Tribes of the Fort Berthold Reservation and was a legal resident of Fort Berthold Reservation, but was living off the reservation to attend college. Roe and the child, on the other hand, wеre legal residents of Standing Rock Sioux Reservation at the time the paternity action was filed on May 17, 1989. The record does not, however, indicate whether Roe or the child were members of Standing Rock Sioux Tribe at the time the paternity action was filed. Although it is undisputed that Roe is currently a member of Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, this fact is, of little help in determining whether the state court lacked subject matter jurisdiction over the paternity action at the time it was filed in 1989.
See State ex rel. R.G. v. W.M.B.,
[¶ 14] Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and Three Affiliated Tribes are each governed by their own legislative bodies, each tribe has its own set of substantive and procedural laws, each tribe has its own trial and appellate courts, and each tribe has its own reservation.
See
Standing Rock Sioux Tribe Code of Justice §§ 1-101, 1-201; Fort Berthold Tribal Code, Title 1, ’ Ch. 1, Sections 2-3;
see also
B.J. Jones,
A Primer on Tribal Court Civil Practice,
n. 2, at http:// www.ndcourts.com/Court/Re-source/Tribal.htm. In order to be a member of Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, an Indian must relinquish any membership rights he or she has in any other tribe.
See
Standing Rock Sioux Tribe Code of Justice § 10-106. Likewise, in order to be a member of Three Affiliated Tribes, an Indian must relinquish any membership rights he or she has in any other tribe.
See
Constitution and Bylaws of the Three Affiliated Tribes of the Fort Berthold Reservation art. II, § 2. Thus, Standing Rock Sioux Tribe and Three Affiliated Tribes each possess separate and distinct “attributes of sovereignty over both their members and their territory” of a “unique and limited character.”
United States v. Wheeler,
[¶ 15] Before resolving these two questions, however, we must also address a second factual distinction between the present case and McKenzie County Social Services Bd. v. V.G., In re M.L.M., and McKenzie County Social Services Bd. v. C.G. In McKenzie County Social Services Bd. v. V.G., In re M.L.M., and McKenzie County Social Service Bd. v. C.G., it was undisputеd that conception of the child occurred on the Indian reservation of the tribe of which all the parties were members. In contrast, in this case, nothing in the record indicates that Doe has ever entered the reservation of Roe’s tribe, Standing Rock Sioux Reservation, or that Roe has ever entered the reservation of Doe’s tribe, Fort Berthold Reservation. It is, however, undisputed that the child was born in Grand Forks, North Dakota, and that Roe and Doe lived together in Grand Forks, North Dakota, prior to the child’s birth. Furthermore, it is undisputed that *573 Roe, Doe, and the child lived together in Grand Forks, North Dakota, after the child’s birth until close to the time of the filing of the paternity action. Additionally, Roe alleged in her complaint the child was conceived in Grand Forks and stated in her answers to Doe’s requests to admit, which were offered by Doe as defendant’s exhibit 5 in support of his motion to vacate, that the child was conceived in Grand Forks. Nothing in the record indicates conclusively that any of the events giving rise to the paternity action occurred within the boundaries of an Indian reservation.
[¶ 16] Despite the parties’ cohabitation in Grand Forks, North Dakota, Doe contends the trial court erred in finding that conception occurred in Grand Forks. Doe states in his affidavit that the actual place of conception is “unknown,” and contends the trial court erred in finding conception occurred in Grand Forks because it based its finding, in part, on a letter submitted by Roe which was hearsay and lacked foundation.
[¶ 17] It is not necessary, however, for us to determine whether the trial court erred in finding conception occurred off either Indian reservation. The burden is on Doe in this case to show the paternity judgment is void as a matter of law.
See McKenzie County Social Service Bd. v. C.G.,
[¶ 18] We now turn to thе issue of whether, as a matter of law, the 1989 paternity judgment is void because state court jurisdiction over the paternity action infringed on either Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s right to govern itself or Three Affiliated Tribes’ right to govern itself.
See McKenzie County Social Service Bd. v. C.G.,
A
[¶ 19] The question in regard to Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s right to govern itself is, whether as a matter of law, state court jurisdiction over an action brought to establish the paternity of a child who is an Indian and resides on Standing Rock Sioux Reservation infringes on the Tribe’s right to govern itself when the action is brought by an Indian who is eligible for membership in Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, and who resides on the Reservation against a member of a different Indian tribe who is a resident of that tribe’s reservation, but is living off the reservation. The United States Supreme Court “repeatedly has approved the exercise of jurisdiction by state courts over claims by Indians against non-Indians, even when those claims arose in Indian country.”
See Three Affiliated Tribes of the Fort Berthold Reservation v. Wold Engineering, P.C.,
The interests implicated in such cases are very different from those present in Williams v. Lee, where a non-Indian sued an Indian in state court for debts incurred in Indian country, or in Fisher v. District Court, where this Court held that a tribal court had exclusive jurisdiction over an adoption proceeding in which all parties were tribal Indians residing on a reservation. As a general matter, tribal self-government is not impeded when a State allows an Indian to enter its courts on equal terms with other persons to seek relief against a non-Indian concerning a claim arising in Indian country.
Three Tribes I,
at 148-49,
[¶ 20] In
Zaman,
the Supreme Court of Arizona relied on
Three Tribes I
to conclude state court jurisdiction over a paternity claim brought by a member of the Navajo Tribe against a non-Indian did not infringe on the Navajo Tribe’s right to govern itself.
See Zaman,
State court jurisdiction over actions brought by Indians against non-Indians does not infringe upon the rights of Indians to make their own laws and to be ruled by them. But Indian rights would be infringed if we permitted a non-Indian to challenge an Indian’s choice of the state forum. Members of tribes are citizens of the United States and of the state in which they reside and thus have the right to bring actions in state court. This right would be substantially hindered if non-Indians could prevent Indians from seeking redress in state court.
Id. at 462.
[¶ 21] In contrast to the defendants in
Three Tribes I
and
Zaman,
Doe is an Indian. However, Doe is not member of Standing Rock Sioux Tribe. Therefore, with respect to Standing Rock Sioux Tribe’s right of self-government, Doe stands “on the same footing as non-Indians.”
See Confederated Tribes,
[¶ 22] The court in
Zaman
held state court jurisdiction over a paternity action brought by a member of a tribe against a non-Indian did not infringe on the tribe’s right to self-government even when the events leading up to the paternity action occurred on the tribe’s reservation.
See Zaman,
[Ajbsent express authorization by federal statute or treaty, tribal jurisdiction over the conduct of nonmembers exists only in limited circumstances. Indian tribes do, however, retain inherent sovereign power to exercise some forms of civil jurisdiction over non-Indians on their reservations. The operative phrase is “on their reservations.” “Neither Montana nor its progeny purports to allow Indian tribes to exercise civil jurisdiction over the activities or conduct of non-Indians occurring outside their reservations.”
Hornell Brewing Co. v. The Rosebud Sioux Tribal Court,
[¶ 23] We also do not need to hold in this case, as the court in
Zaman
did, that state court jurisdiction over a paternity actiоn brought by a member of a tribe against a non-Indian does not infringe on the tribe’s right to self-government even when the child is eligible for membership in the tribe of the reservation on which he or she resides.
See Zaman,
[¶ 24] We, therefore, hold that Doe has not shown, as a matter of law, that the exercise of state court jurisdiction over an action brought to establish the paternity of a child who is an Indian and resides on Standing Rock Sioux Reservation infringes on the Tribe’s right to govern itself when the action is brought by an Indian eligible for membership in Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, who resides on the reservation ■ of that tribe, against a member of Three Affiliated Tribes, who is a legal resident of that tribe’s reservation.
[¶ 25] In reaching this holding, we do not imply that
Byzewski v. Byzewski,
B
■ [¶ 26] The question in regard to Three Affiliated Tribes’ right to govern itself is whether, as a matter of law, state court jurisdiction over an action brought to establish the paternity of a child who is an Indian and resides off Fort Berthold Reservation infringes on the Tribe’s right to govern itself when the action is brought against a member of Three Affiliated Tribes, who is a resident of the reservation of that tribe by an Indian eligible for membership in a different Indian tribe, who is a resident of that tribe’s reservation. As discussed earlier, a tribal court has exclusive civil jurisdiction over claims in which a non-Indian asserts.a claim against an Indi
*578
an for conduct occurring on that Indian’s reservation,
see Williams,
[¶ 27] This case does not present the exclusive tribal court jurisdiction scenario of
Fisher
because it does not involve a claim between members of the same tribe for conduct that occurred on that tribe’s reservation.
See
[¶ 28] In general, tribal courts do not have exclusive jurisdiction over claims against tribal member defendants that arise outside of the reservation.
See
Canby,
supra,
at 180;
see also
Jones,
supra,
§ 1(b) (“[I]n general a tribal court can only exercise jurisdiction over a dispute that arises within its territory.”). “Absent express federal law to the contrary, Indians going beyond reservation boundaries have generally been held subject to nondiscriminatory state law otherwise applicable to all citizens of the State.”
Mescalero Apache Tribe v. Jones,
[¶ 29] Similar to the above cited cases, the undisputed facts of this case are Doe left Fort Berthold Reservation and engaged in a relationship with Roe, a nonmember of Doe’s tribe, outside the boundaries of Fort Berthold Reservation. Nothing in the record indicates any part of Roe and Doe’s relationship occurred within Fort Berthold Reservation. Although Doe contends the place of conception of the child is unknown, this allegation is insufficient to meet Doe’s burden of showing that the 1989 judgment of support and paternity is void as a matter of law.
See McKenzie County Social Service Bd. v. C.G.,
[¶ 30] Where, as here, a paternity action is brought by a nonmember of Three Affiliated Tribes and a non-resident of Fort Berthold Reservation against a member of Three Affiliated Tribes whose legal residency is Fort Berthold Reservation, and the record indicates that all the events leading up to the action occurred off Fort Berthold Reservation and the place of conception is unknown, we cannot say, as a matter of law, that state court jurisdiction over the action infringed on Three Affiliated Tribes’ right of self-government.
See John,
[¶ 31] In reaching this holding, we recognize that, like Standing Rock Sioux Tribe, Three Affiliated Tribes retains “inherent power to determine tribal membership, to regulate domestic relations among members, and to prescribe rules of inheritance for members.”
See Montana,
[¶ 32] We, therefore, hold that Doe has failed to show the 1989 paternity judgment is void as a matter of law. We affirm the trial court’s order.
Notes
. In
Duro,
the Court held a tribe does not have criminal jurisdiction to prosecute nonmember Indians for crimes committed on the tribe's reservation.
See
. The Supreme Court has been, criticized for focusing on tribal membership in resolving tribal sovereignty issues. See, e.g., Allison M. Dussias, Geographically-Based and Membership-Based Views of Indian Tribal Sovereignty: The Supreme Court’s Changing Vision, 55 U. Pitt. L.Rev. 1, 35 & 48 (1993). This criticism, however, has only been levied against cases in which the conduct of the nonmembers occurred within the geographical boundaries of a tribe’s reservation. See id. Such criticism is inapplicable to this case, because nothing in the record indicates that Doe has ever entered the reservation of Roe's tribe, Standing Rock Sioux Reservation, or that Roe has ever entered the reservation of Doe's tribe, Fort Berthold Reservation.
