Victoria Price Brown (appellant) appeals from a judgment of the Circuit Court of Washington County (trial court) that approved a jury verdict convicting her for obstructing justice by resisting arrest in violation of Code § 18.2-460. 1 Appellant resisted an attempt to arrest her by police officers who were acting pursuant to a capias issued for another person whose name was “Vicki R. Edwards, AKA Vicki Edwards Brown.” Appellant contends that because the arrest was unlawful, she had the right to resist. The Commonwealth asserts that because the attempt to arrest was made in “good faith,” it was lawful and, therefore, appellant had no right to resist. For the reasons that follow, we reverse the conviction.
Upon familiar principles, we state the evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth, granting to it all reasonable inferences fairly deducible therefrom.
See Martin v. Commonwealth, 4
Va.App. 438, 443,
ARREST THIS RESPONDENT:
EDWARDS, VICKI R.
506 Lowry Drive, Apt. # 1
Abingdon, VA 24210
AKA: Vicki Edwards Brown
W F 8 21 70 5 5 240 BR Br 224-39-9684
* * * *
In re/V.
Vicki R. Edwards
The officers testified they knew appellant as Vicki Brown and thought the capias was for appellant, notwithstanding that Edwards’ address was on the other side of town from appellant’s residence. 2
Officers Hay and Slagle arrived at appellant’s house first. When Sergeant Miller arrived, he gave the capias to Hay. The officers’ statements regarding what happened next vary and sometimes conflict. Miller said that upon arrival at appellant’s house, they made no investigation “at all” and did not ask for identification. Hay said that, while at the jail, appellant told them she thought the capias was for a debt that *115 had been satisfied; Miller said she made that statement at her residence as they attempted to serve the capias. Hay said that appellant began to curse and kick and was sprayed with pepper gas as he was reading her the warrant; Miller said appellant was not sprayed until after she “wadded up the warrant and threw it on the floor.” Slagle said Miller read the warrant to appellant; Hay said he read the warrant to appellant. Miller said appellant stayed on the couch where she kicked at one of the officers and that she never stood or jumped up. Slagle claimed appellant “jumped up” and “swung” at him. Hay contended appellant jumped up and kicked but did not aim the kick at any officer. Miller said it was aimed at one of the officers. None of the officers ever said, “I have a warrant for Vicki R. Edwards, AKA Vicki Edwards Brown.”
It is apparent that the officers knew appellant as “Vicki Brown” and that while they attempted to execute the capias, appellant cursed, kicked without making any contact, and resisted arrest. The Commonwealth concedes that appellant was not the person named in the capias. Although the officers read the warrant to appellant, none testified that they specifically told appellant that the capias showed the warrant was to arrest “Edwards, Vicki R. ... AKA Vicki Edwards Brown,” as it was in fact.
When the Commonwealth rested, appellant moved to strike the evidence against her. Appellant argued that because the capias was for Vicki R. Edwards, who was shown to reside at an address different from that of appellant, the attempt to arrest was “a warrantless arrest,” without probable cause, for a misdemeanor not committed in the officers’ presence. Appellant further argued that, in Virginia, “a person has the absolute right to resist an illegal arrest by whatever force is necessary and reasonable under the circumstances.”
The Commonwealth contends that, notwithstanding the officers’ arrest of the wrong person, because the arrest was made in good faith, appellant had no right to resist. We disagree.
*116
In
Polk v. Commonwealth,
Contending that the arrest was lawful, the Commonwealth cites several cases holding that erroneous arrests were held to be lawful when made in “good faith.”
See, e.g., Hill v. California,
In Virginia, authorization to make a warrantless arrest is limited to those situations provided for in the Code of Virginia.
See
Code §§ 19.2-77, 19.2-81, 19.2-100. The lawfulness of an attempted arrest is determined by those code sections.
See Foote v. Commonwealth,
Cases that protect police officers from civil liability or that apply the good faith exception to the exclusionary rule to evidence acquired pursuant to an erroneous arrest are not controlling.
It has long been held in Virginia that where an officer attempts an unlawful arrest, the officer is an aggressor which
*117
gives the arrestee the right to use self-defense to resist so long as the force used is reasonable.
See id.
at 69,
When the issue on appeal is whether there is sufficient evidence to support a criminal conviction, we view conflicting evidence in the light most favorable to the Commonwealth. However, when the issues are the lawfulness of an arrest and the reasonableness of force used to resist an unlawful arrest, the ultimate questions involve law and fact and are reviewed
de novo
on appeal.
See Foote,
The Commonwealth’s evidence relevant to the confrontation conflicts. One officer, Sergeant Miller, the supervisor who had the capias in his vehicle, testified that appellant did not jump from the sofa but instead that her entire resistance was by cursing and kicking while remaining seated on the sofa. Hay, who had been given the capias to read to appellant, said that appellant “jumped” from the sofa and kicked, but that the kicking was not “aimed” at any of the officers. None of those acts constituted the use of unreasonable force to resist an unlawful arrest.
Moreover, even a casual reading of the capias discloses that the officers were authorized to arrest only Vicki R. Edwards or a person sometimes known as Vicki Edwards Brown. Careless reading of the capias cannot divest a wrongly accused person of a right otherwise possessed by law. The officers’ mistaken belief that appellant was the person named in the capias did not make the capias an instrument upon which the police could lawfully arrest appellant, even if that mistake was made in good faith.
*118
The police officers became aggressors when they attempted to arrest a person not named in the capias upon which they relied for the arrest, and they were at fault in the confrontation.
See Foote,
Accordingly, for the reasons stated, we reverse the judgment of the trial court and dismiss appellant from further prosecution on the charge.
Reversed and dismissed.
Notes
. That section provides:
Obstructing justice. — A. If any person without just cause knowingly obstructs a ... law-enforcement officer in the performance of his duties as such or fails or refuses without just cause to cease such obstruction when requested to do so by such ... law-enforcement officer, he shall be guilty of a Class 2 misdemeanor.
B. If any person, by threats or force, knowingly attempts to intimidate or impede a ... law-enforcement officer, lawfully engaged in his duties as such, or to obstruct or impede the administration of justice in any court, he shall be deemed to be guilty of a Class 1 misdemeanor.
C. If any person by threats of bodily harm or force knowingly attempts to intimidate or impede a ... law-enforcement officer, lawfully engaged in the discharge of his duty, or to obstruct or impede the administration of justice in any court relating to a violation of or conspiracy to violate § 18.2-248 or § 18.2-248.1(a)(3), (b) or (c) he shall be guilty of a Class 5 felony.
. There was no evidence that appellant had ever been known as Vicki Edwards or seen at Edwards’ address. Likewise, there was no evidence that the officers knew appellant as Vicki Edwards Brown.
