THE wife of a man who was left in a permanent coma after being punched at a party spoke of her guilt, as his attacker faced a "substantial" jail sentence.

Thomas Hurley, 22, was yesterday convicted of grievous bodily harm after admitting punching Andrew Williams at a party in Dorchester in February, 2007.

Mr Williams, 37, was punched several times by Hurley and suffered severe injuries when he fell to the floor and hit his head.

Mr Williams, a labourer from Didcot, now requires round-the-clock care in a nursing home and has to be fed through a tube.

Last night, Mr Williams's wife Susan, 32, said she felt no satisfaction at the verdict - and even felt some guilt for what had happened.

During the week-long trial at Oxford Crown Court, the jury heard that Hurley, formerly of Dorchester but now living in Portland, Dorset, had followed Mr Williams into the garden of the house in Bridge End because he believed he had been violent towards his wife.

But Mrs Williams, originally from Australia, said her husband had never hit her and their argument had been no more than a drunken disagreement.

She said: "I suppose I feel guilty, but I know I am not the one that took my hand to him."

Speaking about the verdict she said: "It is not going to bring Andy back.

"It is like half-grieving really. You can't grieve properly. My life has stopped, it has completely stopped."

She said her and her husband - who had a child from a previous relationship - had been about to start trying for children.

"I visit him every day," she said. I spend most of my time kissing him, trying to get him to respond to me.

"We have lost him. He is still with us physically. That is why it makes it hard to grieve because he is there in front of you - you can hear his heart beat."

Doctors say he will never wake up and have warned his family he is likely to die within five years.

The jury took almost six hours to clear Hurley of grievous bodily harm with intent - but convicted him of a lesser charge of inflicting grievous bodily harm.

Hurley denied both charges and claimed he was only acting in self-defence.

Mr Williams's father Michael, 62, from Dorchester, said: "Hurley will get on with his life in a few years. He has made sure my son doesn't have a life."

Det Sgt Darren Cartwright, the officer in the case, said: "On the one hand you have got a relatively young man whose life has been effectively ended and on the other you have got a younger man whose life has effectively been ruined for the time being."

Judge Antonio Bueno adjourned sentencing until May 23.

Remanding Hurley in custody, he said: "You are facing a substantial sentence of imprisonment."