Morris Jones, Luther Jones, and R. D. Jones, were jointly indicted for the offense of assault with intent to murder, in that they, with malice aforethought and with intent to kill, did, on July 1, 1944, assault one Timothy Gibson with "a knife, dirk, razor, and a piece of lumber, wooden stick and bludgeon, and other sharp and blunt instruments likely to produce death." All of these defendants were tried together and convicted, and filed separate motions for new trial which were overruled, and they excepted. Held: The motions for a new trial contain only the general grounds. The records disclose that the evidence for the State, if credible, was sufficient to support the verdicts against each of the defendants. The jury being the judges of the weight of the evidence, this court can not disturb the judgments refusing a new trial.
Judgment affirmed. Broyles, C. J., and Gardner, J.,concur.
The sheriff testified, for the State in part, as follows: "I saw Boisy [Timothy] Gibson [the next morning after the alleged assault]. I know Boisy. He was all cut up, he was cut in his back, stabbed a place or two on his legs, on the back of his legs, and two gashes I believe on the back of his head and this bad gash across here, back of his head. I see the places by marks up on his head *Page 35 now. I know he was detained a good while with one of those wounds. I saw Boisy's wound after I got some information from Dr. Adams. His head was swelled and his eyes closed. That was along about the middle of the week after the event on Saturday, July 1st. That was about the middle of the next week. . . Boisy was off from work something like three or four weeks, the doctor notified me about the fourth or fifth day that Boisy was out of danger. That is when I released these boys on bond. The doctor notified me, sent me this message, and I confined them; as soon as he notified me that he was out of danger, I released them on bond. I saw that shirt and pair of pants that you had in here this morning, I got them from Boisy, that is the clothes that he had on. I got them that Sunday up there, the next day after the thing happened. I got them at Boisy's house."
In short, the jury were authorized to find that Morris Jones unjustifiably struck the prosecutor, Gibson, with a stick or a piece of lumber about two inches and three or four feet long; that, while Morris Jones and Gibson, the prosecutor, were struggling for the piece of lumber, or stick, Luther Jones and R. D. Jones, cousins of Morris Jones, ran up behind the prosecutor and began cutting him with knives; that the prosecutor jerked away from them and ran and fell, when all three of the said Jones boys "covered him;" that "all three of them were cutting and beating him;" that Cleve Raines got the three Jones boys off of the prosecutor and took him away from the immediate scene of the beating and cutting; that "he was bleeding in the back like a hog;" that he also had "licks" on the other part of the head and body; that, while on this occasion he was showing others how the Jones boys had "beaten and cut him up," Morris Jones renewed his attack on the prosecutor with another stick, which some of the witnesses described as "edging, two inches square and three or four feet long;" that on this occasion Morris Jones hit the prosecutor twice on the head with the strip hard enough to break the stick into several pieces; and that the scars from the cuts and beating were exhibited to the jury.
Each of the defendants made a statement to the jury denying their guilt, and put up witnesses who corroborated in part such statements. Some of the defendants also introduced character witnesses, thus putting their character in evidence. There was *Page 36 some rebuttal evidence by the State on the subject of character. The jury rejected the defendant' statement and the evidence introduced by them, believed the State's theory, and convicted the three defendants of an assault with intent to murder, which they were authorized by the evidence to do.
