A jury сonvicted James Edward Perry (appellant) of possession of phencyclidine (PCP) pursuant to Code § 18.2-250 and fined him $2,500. On appeal, appellant argues that the trial court erred when it denied his motion to suppress the drugs found by the police during a search of his person. Specifically, appellant contends that the trooper who searched him did nоt have a reasonable suspicion that he was armed and dangerous, and, therefore, the trooper’s actions violated the Fourth Amendment principles as established in
Terry v. Ohio,
BACKGROUND
At 2:00 a.m. on Octоber 15, 2006, Trooper Weidhaas was traveling down Interstate 66 in Arlington County. As he drove along, the trooper spotted a silver car parked on the right shoulder of the interstate, in a well-lit area. Trooper Weidhaas pulled over, parked behind the silver car, and got out of his patrol vehicle.
As Trooper Weidhaas walked toward the car, he noticed that the windows and the sunroof of the silver car were open. *125 Before he reached the car, the trooper “detected a strong odor of marijuana coming from” the car. Based on this smell of drugs, the officer stated that he became concerned that the passengers might have guns.
Three men were in the silver car—appellant sat in the bаck seat, Maurice Sprurgeon (Sprurgeon) sat in the front passenger seat, and Valdemere Perry (Valdemere) sat in the driver’s seat. Trooper Weidhaas approached Valdemere first and asked for his information. Upon checking his driving record, the trooper discovered that Valdemere’s license was suspended. The trooper then begаn checking to see if any of the passengers could legally drive the car. Around this time, at least one other trooper arrived at the scene and took control of Valdemere.
Trooper Weidhaas then turned his attention to Sprurgeon. Sprurgeon was not “very coherent” and “looked visibly impaired.” His reactions were slow and unsteady, and he wаs non-responsive. Trooper Weidhaas thought Sprurgeon might be under the influence of marijuana or PCP. Based on his training and experience, the trooper believed that persons under the influence of PCP were inclined to suddenly attack and to ignore pain, such that they will ignore any officer’s attempts to restrain them. If Sprurgeon was under the influence of PCP, thеn the trooper was concerned that he presented a significant danger to the officers.
Trooper Weidhaas asked Sprurgeon to step out of the car, and, as he did so, Sprurgeon dropped a small vial onto the ground by the car. The vial’s cap came off, and the trooper could see a dark green plant material inside the vial that looked like marijuana. The trooper thought the marijuana was treated with something like PCP.
The trooper arrested Sprurgeon and read his Miranda rights to him. Trooper Weidhaas testified at the suppression hearing that Sprurgeon then admitted that he had smoked PCP that evening. The trooper did a field test of the substance in the vial, and it tested positive for marijuana and PCP.
*126 After dealing with Sprurgeon, Trooper Weidhaаs approached appellant. Appellant was in “the exact same” condition as Sprurgeon, i.e., “visibly impaired,” “[n]ot very coherent,” unsteady on his feet, and non-responsive. The trooper believed appellant had also used PCP. During the suppression hearing, appellant’s counsel conceded that appellant was cleаrly “under the influence of something” when Trooper Weidhaas approached him.
After asking appellant to get out of the car, Trooper Weidhaas did a pat-down search of him for weapons. During the suppression hearing, the trooper described how he used his hands during the pat-down search. He explained that, when he reached appellant’s front pocket, the trooper felt and saw a bulge that “was consistent with” the vial that Sprurgeon had dropped on the ground.
Trooper Weidhaas asked appellant about the item, and appellant was non-responsive. The trooper testified that he then asked appellant, ‘Would you mind showing what’s in your pockets?” Appellant reached into his pocket and pulled out a vial exactly like the one that Sprurgeon dropped. When Trooper Weidhaas asked what was in the vial, appellant said “marijuana.” Appellant also admitted that he had smoked PCP that night, and the trooper then arrested him.
At the suppression hearing, appellant argued that Trooper Weidhaas did not have a reasonable belief that appellant was armed and dangerous, so the pat down was in violation of his Fourth Amendment rights, pursuant to
Terry v. Ohio,
The trial court found the frisk was permissible because drugs were involved. The court also noted that the frisk was “a very close case,” but denied appellant’s motion to suppress. A jury found appellant guilty of possession of PCP and fined him $2,500.
ANALYSIS
A. “Armed and Dangerous”
Appellant argues that the trial court had no evidence before it to support the conclusion that the trooper reasonably believed that he was armed and dangerous, as required under
Terry,
We assume without deciding here that the trial court erred when it found that Trooper Weidhaas had reasonable suspicion to believe appellant was armed and dangerous. Appellant argues that we should not consider the Commonwealth’s alternative justification for the trial court’s denial of his motion, as the prosecutor did not argue this alternative rationale to the trial court. We must first address this argument before we can consider whether the trooper had probable cause to support his actions.
B. Right Result/Wrong Reason
The Commonwealth asks this Court to affirm appellant’s conviction because Trooper Weidhaas had probable cause to arrest appellant, which would justify the search under the Fourth Amendment as a search incident to an arrest.
See Chimel v. California,
The Supreme Court in
Whitehead
considered whether the evidence was sufficient to convict Whitehead of receiving stolen property. For the first time on appeal, the Commonwealth argued that Whitehead had “received the stolеn property
itself
under the doctrine of constructive possession,”
id.,
— Va. at -,
Nevertheless, the Supreme Court of Virginia then emphasized:
The Court of Appeals has previously observed that:
An appellate court may affirm the judgment of a trial court when it has reached the right result for the wrong reason. However, *129 [t]he rule does not always apply---- [T]he proper application of this rule does not include those cases where, because the trial court has rejected the right reason or confined its decision to a specific ground, further factual resolution is needed before the right reason may be assigned to support the trial court’s decision.
Harris v. Commonwealth,
Id.,
— Va. at-,
The Court also cited
Eason v. Eason,
*130
In addition, in the case before this Court, the Commonwealth argues on appeal that Trooper Weidhaas had prоbable cause to arrest appellant prior to the pat-down search, and, thus, the search was permissible. This argument, like the argument based on reasonable suspicion that was presented to the trial court here, is also a Fourth Amendment argument. All the facts required to consider this legal argument were presented to the trial court and considеred by it when it addressed the Fourth Amendment reasonable suspicion argument of the trial prosecutor. Thus, we find the posture of this case is quite similar to the situation in the recent case of
Moore v. Commonwealth,
We find that this case presents an appropriate situation for the application of the right result/wrong reason doctrine. Whitehead does not preclude consideration of the legal theory presented here—that probable cause existed for the arrest and search of appellant. As in Moore, thе parties here were aware at all stages of this case that the courts would look to the Fourth Amendment to determine if Trooper Weidhaas’s actions were appropriate—regardless of whether the question involved probable cause or reasonable articulable suspicion.
C. Probable Cause
As noted,
supra,
the Commonwealth argues on appeal thаt Trooper Weidhaas had probable cause to arrest appellant, and, therefore, the search. did not violate the dictates of the Fourth Amendment even if the search was not justified under the principles established in
Terry.
Appellant agrees that, if the trooper had probable cause to arrest him, then the search was valid as a search incident to arrest.
See Wright,
We agree with the Commonwealth that Trooper Weidhaas had probable cause to arrest appellant. Thus, we conclude that the trial court—even assuming without deciding that some of its reasoning was not correct—reached the right conclusion when it denied appellant’s motion to suppress.
The United States Supreme Court has explained probable cause numerous times. In
Maryland v. Pringle,
“[t]he substance of all the definitions of probable cause is a reasonable ground for belief of guilt,” [Brinegar v. United States,338 U.S. 160 , 175,69 S.Ct. 1302 , 1310,93 L.Ed. 1879 (1949)] (internal quotation marks and citations omitted), and that the belief of guilt must be particularized with respect to the person to be searched or seized, Ybarra v. Illinois,444 U.S. 85 , 91,100 S.Ct. 338 , 342,62 L.Ed.2d 238 (1979).
% * * # * *
To determine whether an officer had prоbable cause to arrest an individual, we examine the events leading up to the arrest, and then decide “whether these historical facts, viewed from the standpoint of an objectively reasonable police officer, amount to” probable cause, Ornelas [v. United States,517 U.S. 690 ,] 696,116 S.Ct. 1657 , 1661,134 L.Ed.2d 911 [ (1996) ].
Id.
at 371,
Here, as Trooper Weidhaas approached the silver car, which was stoрped on the shoulder of Interstate 66 at two o’clock in the morning, he smelled a strong odor of marijuana coming from the car. Trooper Weidhaas had additional information as well by the time he confronted appellant. Prior to his interaction with appellant, the trooper had arrested another
*132
passenger in the car—Sprurgeon. Trooper Weidhaas recovered PCP and marijuana that Sprurgeon had dropped as he got out of the car. Sprurgeon behaved in a manner consistent with someone under the influence of PCP, and Sprurgeon had admitted to the trooper that he had smoked PCP that evening. Appellant was behaving in the exact same manner as Sprurgeon, allowing the offiсer to reach the logical conclusion that appellant had also smoked PCP that evening. Appellant’s counsel conceded at the suppression hearing that appellant was clearly “under the influence of something” when Trooper Weidhaas talked to him. Based on all these facts, which the trial court clearly considered in finding the trooper had reasonable suspicion for the pat-down search, the trooper certainly had probable cause to believe that appellant possessed illegal drugs—either by having joint or constructive possession of the drugs originally in Sprurgeon’s hand or by having actual possession of other drugs that the officer had not yet seen.
See Ritter v. Commonwealth,
Appellant argues that probable cause “must be particularized with respect to the person to be searched” and contends that the facts here did not particularly indicate that he actually possessed PCP or marijuana. We believe the facts here provided thе trooper with sufficient information to particularize the probable cause to appellant.
First, appellant was one of only three people in the car, which was parked on the shoulder of the interstate, from which the smell of marijuana was emanating. Second, appellant had clearly ingested some intoxicating agent, and thе only agents at the scene were PCP and marijuana. Third, the trooper, based on his training and experience, believed appellant’s behavior indicated that he had ingested PCP and/or marijuana. In addition, Sprurgeon had admitted that he smoked PCP earlier that evening, and appellant was behaving in exactly the same manner as Sprurgeon. These facts did more than suggest that someone in the general area had marijuana or PCP in his possession—they gave the trooper
*133
probable cause to believe that appellant in particular possessed and had been using illegal narcotics.
See Dodd v. Commonwealth,
CONCLUSION
We assume without deciding that the trial сourt erred when it found Trooper Weidhaas had sufficient information to provide him with reasonable articulable suspicion that appellant was armed and dangerous. Nevertheless, we find that the trial court’s ruling that denied the motion to suppress was correct as the trooper had probable cause to arrest appellant and, therefore, did not violate the Fourth Amendment when searching him. Thus, we find the trial court did not err in denying appellant’s motion to suppress, and we affirm appellant’s conviction.
Affirmed.
