delivered the Opinion of the Court.
This appeal from the Thirteenth Judicial District involves appellants Phillips’ and Hake’s (Phillips) claims against the City of Billings (Billings) for the alleged negligence of two city police officers. The District Court granted summary judgment to Billings. We affirm.
The undisputed facts are as follows: At approximately 6:00 a.m., on February 28,1986, a car driven by James Buffalohorn entered a Billings interseсtion against a red light and collided with a car occupied by “Dennis” Phillips and Owen Hake. Hake and Phillips suffered *251 injuries as a result of the collision. Blood alcohol testing indicаted that Buffalohorn was intoxicated at the time of the accident.
Approximately two hours prior to the accident, Billings police officers Randy Vogel and Keith Buxbaum had detained and questioned Buffalohorn in connection with a report made by motorist Shane Stamm. Prior to the report, sheriff’s deputy Bill Michaelis had observed Stamm drive his vehicle off the road. Michaelis stopped Stamm and questioned him concerning the accident. Stamm told Michaelis that a light colored Pinto had swerved into his lane and forсed him off the road.
Stamm’s allegation was communicated to Officer Vogel, and Vogel began to search the area for the Pinto. Moments later he observed Buffalohorn and a companion standing next to a light colored Pinto parked on a Billings street. Vogel drove to the car, detained the two individuals, and performed a pat dоwn search for weapons. Vogel noticed that the car had been recently driven. Buxbaum arrived with Stamm to identify the car. Stamm viewed the vehicle and insisted that the Pinto was not involved in the accident. Buxbaum and Vogel deposed that they suspected Stamm was less than candid as to the other vehicle involved. They speculated that Stamm was аctually to blame for his vehicle leaving the road, and that now that police had found the other vehicle, Stamm was unwilling to blame the individuals driving the car he had described to рolice.
Buxbaum and Vogel noticed alcohol on the breath of Buffalohorn and his companion. Buxbaum noticed pop and beer cans and other garbage in Buffalohorn’s vehicle. The officers stated that Buffalohorn and his companion were polite and cooperative, and that even though they smelled of alcohol, neither appeared to be in a state of extreme intoxication. Buxbaum and Vogel also stated that they did not believe probable cause existed to arrеst either individual for a DUI violation because neither was seen in control of the car. However, Buxbaum remembers Vogel telling the suspects to refrain from driving the car. The officers then returned to where Stamm ran off the road, investigated the accident, and cited Stamm for careless driving and failure to carry proof of insurance.
On these facts, the District Court granted summary judgment to Billings. The lower court reasoned that absent probable cause to arrest, no duty flowed from the officers to Phillips to protect Phillips from the actions of Buffalohorn. We agree.
The precise issue here is offered by respondent Billings: Did the District Court properly grant summary judgment on the grounds *252 that probable cause to arrest was absent as a matter of law and no other source of legal duty exists? Appellant Phillips presents four issues for review. However, each issue prеsented by Phillips, as well as the various contentions under each issue, may be more clearly discussed as contentions under the single issue offered by Billings.
The first made by Phillips is that the lowеr court failed to justify its decision under any theory of Montana tort law. This has no bearing on our resolution of the issue because this Court affirms district court decisions which are correct regardless of the lower court’s reasoning in reaching its decision.
Norwest Bank v. Murnion
(Mont. 1984),
The second contention made by Phillips is that the District Court erred because it granted summary judgment by holding thаt the officers had no duty to Phillips beyond the mere duty to arrest Buffalohorn. Phillips presents the following conclusion from the District Court’s memorandum:
“The court further concludes that under the circumstances as set forth herein that the police officers had no duty to stay with either the suspects or its [sic] vehicle beyond the time that they did nor did they have any duty to arrest the suspects or prevent them further from operating this vehicle.”
Phillips, citing Section 319 of the Restatement (Second) of Torts, argues that the officers had a duty to control the potentially dangerous actions of Buffalohorn. Section 319 of the Restatement (Second) of Torts, reads:
“One who takes charge of a third person whom he knows or should know to be likely to cause bodily harm to others if not controlled is under a duty to exercise reasonable care to control the third person to prevent him from doing such harm.”
Restatement (Second) of Torts,
Section 319 (1965). (Emphasis added.) We reject this argument because imposition of a duty under Section 319 depends on an ability to control the third person.
Abernathy v. United States
(8th Cir. 1985),
Phillips contends liability may be predicated on a duty to investigate effectively because an effective investigation would have ripened into probable cause and resulted in arrest of Buffalohorn.
*253
We disagree. Closeness of the connection between the defendant’s conduct and the injury suffered is a factor courts have considered in imposing a duty of due cаre.
Harris,
Phillips argues the duty exists here because the risk was foreseeable. We disagree. Courts consider other factors in addition to foreseeability in dеciding the existence of a duty.
Harris,
Phillips contends that the officers’ duty to plaintiffs as membеrs of the traveling public created a duty in this case. The majority rule states that the general duty to protect does not give rise to liability for a particular individual’s injury absent а greater duty imposed by a special relationship. See Annotation,
Drunk Drivers: Duty to Arrest,
Phillips contends that the officers’ duty to act with reasonable care under the circumstances exists as a duty apart from any specific duty, and thus summary judgment was improper. We disagree. See
Whitfield v. Therriault Corp.
(Mont. 1987), [
Phillips contends that the officers had probable cause to arrest Buffalohorn. We disagree. Stamm’s failure to idеntify Buffalohorn and his vehicle, coupled with the lack of any other information indicating that Buffalohorn had operated the vehicle, constituted lack of probablе cause to arrest Buffalohorn for DUI or any charge in connection with operation of the car.
*254 Phillips contends that the presence of beer cans in the vehicle gave the officers probable cause to arrest for violation of the Billings open container ordinance. This connection is too tenuous to estаblish duty for failure to restrain Buffalohorn.
Phillips contends that summary judgment was improper under this Court’s decision in
Lindquist v. Moran
(1983),
Fourth amendment rights naturally compete with a police officer’s duty to protect the public. Courts facing the issuе we face today are wary to force police officers to choose between liability for failure to arrest, and liability for false arrest. Lack of probable cause denied the officers in this case the legal authority to arrest. Thus, we agree with the District Court that lack of probable cause demonstrates lack of a material fact question, and entitles Billings to judgment as a matter of law.
Whitfield,
