OPINION
COCHRAN, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court
in which MEYERS, PRICE, JOHNSON, and HOLCOMB, JJ., joined.
In this case, we are asked to decide whether the doctrine of collateral estoppel [266]*266applies in a subsequent prosecution of appellant for attempted capital murder or attempted murder of his wife’s lover, when a prior jury found that appellant killed his wife “in sudden passion” during the same transaction. We find that the doctrine of collateral estoppel does apply, though it does not preclude the State from prosecuting the charged offenses. Therefore, we affirm the decision of the Second Court of Appeals, which held that the State is precluded from re-litigating the issue of sudden passion in the second trial. Ex parte Watkins, 52 S.W.3d 858 (Tex.App.-Fort Worth 2001).
I.
The evidence at the first trial showed that Nancy Watkins, appellant’s estranged wife, made her husband move out of their home on December 21, 1998. She remained in the house with their two children. Her lover, Keith Fontenot, moved in that same evening. Through various telephone calls, appellant discovered that Keith and Nancy had made love that night on the living room floor with the children upstairs. The next afternoon, December 22nd, appellant called his wife on his cellular telephone, telling her that he would kill her, kill Fontenot, and then kill himself. A few minutes later, he stormed into the house, still holding his telephone to his ear and carrying a gun. He went past Fonte-not, who was in the living room, and found Nancy in the kitchen. He shot her twice, but neither wound was fatal. When Fon-tenot ran into the kitchen and saw Nancy on the floor, appellant began shooting at him. Fontenot was hit in the back and leg, but not seriously injured. As appellant continued to shoot at him, Fontenot ran out the front door and around the side of the house; he leapt over a chain link fence, ran through the back-yard, jumped over another fence into a neighbor’s yard, where he collapsed and called for help. He then saw appellant come out of the house, get in his truck and drive off. Appellant had stopped shooting because he thought the gun was out of bullets. Within five minutes, he returned, having discovered that the gun was not out of bullets. Appellant re-entered the house, shot Nancy several more times — this time fatally— and then he drove off again.
At the guilt stage of appellant’s trial for his wife’s murder, defense counsel argued that appellant did not form any intent during this incident, arguing instead that appellant was temporarily insane and was mentally “gone.”1 The jury rejected this argument and convicted Jimmy Dean Watkins of murder. However, during the punishment phase, it was asked to decide whether appellant had murdered his wife “in sudden passion” under Tex. Penal Code § 19.02(d).2 After lengthy delibera[267]*267tion, the jury concluded that Jimmy Dean Watkins had acted under the immediate influence of sudden passion in causing his wife’s death and it sentenced him to ten years community supervision. The State then indicted appellant for the attempted capital murder3 and attempted murder of Keith Fontenot, as well as aggravated assault with a deadly weapon.
Appellant filed a pretrial writ of habeas corpus, alleging that the doctrine of collateral estoppel bars relitigating the issue of his mental state and that the double jeopardy clause bars the State from prosecuting him for the attempted capital murder of Mr. Fontenot. The trial judge denied habeas relief. The Second Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s denial of relief on appellant’s double jeopardy claim, but reversed the trial court’s denial of relief on the collateral estoppel issue. Ex parte Watkins, 52 S.W.3d 858, 861 (Tex.App.-Fort Worth 2001). The State then filed a petition for discretionary review with this Court, arguing that the court of appeals erred in granting appellant collateral estoppel relief.4
II.
The doctrine of collateral estop-pel is embodied within the constitutional bar against double jeopardy.5 But the two are not identical.6 Double jeopardy bars any retrial of a criminal offense, while collateral estoppel bars any retrial of specific and discrete facts that have been fully and fairly adjudicated. Double jeopardy applies only to criminal cases,7 while collateral estoppel applies in both criminal and [268]*268civil proceedings.8 Thus, cases hinging on the doctrine of double jeopardy do not necessarily apply to a collateral estoppel claim and those hinging on the doctrine, of collateral estoppel do not necessarily apply to a claim of double jeopardy. The two doctrines are treated similarly, however, when a collateral estoppel claim is based on the constitutional rule set out in Ashe v. Swenson.
Under this constitutionally based doctrine of collateral estoppel, “when an issue of ultimate fact has once been determined by a valid and final judgment, that issue cannot again be litigated between the same parties in any future lawsuit.”9 That is, once a jury determines a discrete fact in favor of a criminal defendant, the State cannot contest the jury’s finding in a subsequent proceeding.10 In applying the doctrine of collateral estoppel, courts must first determine whether the jury determined a specific fact, and if so, how broad — in terms of time, space and content — was the scope of its finding. Before collateral estoppel will apply to bar relit-igation of a discrete fact, that fact must necessarily have been decided in favor of the defendant in the first trial.11 The mere possibility that a fact may have been determined in a former trial is insufficient to bar relitigation of that same fact in a second trial.12 In each case, courts must review the entire trial record, as well as the pleadings, the charge, and the arguments of the attorneys, to determine “with realism and rationality” precisely which facts the jury necessarily decided and [269]*269whether the scope of its findings regarding specific historical facts bars relitigation of those same facts in a second criminal trial.13
A general verdict returned in the guilt phase of a criminal trial frequently makes it difficult to determine precisely which historical facts a jury found to support an acquittal. This task is considerably less difficult when a jury is given special fact issues to determine.14 Some of these discrete factual issues are submitted to the jury at the guilt stage, while others are submitted at the punishment stage.15 On some of these factual issues, the State has the burden to prove the fact beyond a reasonable doubt, while on others the defendant has the burden to prove the fact by a preponderance of the evidence.16 The essential common characteristic is that the jury has found a specific, discrete historical fact. If the jury decides that fact in the defendant’s favor, the doctrine of collateral estoppel bars the State from relit-igating it in a second criminal trial.
III.
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OPINION
COCHRAN, J.,
delivered the opinion of the Court
in which MEYERS, PRICE, JOHNSON, and HOLCOMB, JJ., joined.
In this case, we are asked to decide whether the doctrine of collateral estoppel [266]*266applies in a subsequent prosecution of appellant for attempted capital murder or attempted murder of his wife’s lover, when a prior jury found that appellant killed his wife “in sudden passion” during the same transaction. We find that the doctrine of collateral estoppel does apply, though it does not preclude the State from prosecuting the charged offenses. Therefore, we affirm the decision of the Second Court of Appeals, which held that the State is precluded from re-litigating the issue of sudden passion in the second trial. Ex parte Watkins, 52 S.W.3d 858 (Tex.App.-Fort Worth 2001).
I.
The evidence at the first trial showed that Nancy Watkins, appellant’s estranged wife, made her husband move out of their home on December 21, 1998. She remained in the house with their two children. Her lover, Keith Fontenot, moved in that same evening. Through various telephone calls, appellant discovered that Keith and Nancy had made love that night on the living room floor with the children upstairs. The next afternoon, December 22nd, appellant called his wife on his cellular telephone, telling her that he would kill her, kill Fontenot, and then kill himself. A few minutes later, he stormed into the house, still holding his telephone to his ear and carrying a gun. He went past Fonte-not, who was in the living room, and found Nancy in the kitchen. He shot her twice, but neither wound was fatal. When Fon-tenot ran into the kitchen and saw Nancy on the floor, appellant began shooting at him. Fontenot was hit in the back and leg, but not seriously injured. As appellant continued to shoot at him, Fontenot ran out the front door and around the side of the house; he leapt over a chain link fence, ran through the back-yard, jumped over another fence into a neighbor’s yard, where he collapsed and called for help. He then saw appellant come out of the house, get in his truck and drive off. Appellant had stopped shooting because he thought the gun was out of bullets. Within five minutes, he returned, having discovered that the gun was not out of bullets. Appellant re-entered the house, shot Nancy several more times — this time fatally— and then he drove off again.
At the guilt stage of appellant’s trial for his wife’s murder, defense counsel argued that appellant did not form any intent during this incident, arguing instead that appellant was temporarily insane and was mentally “gone.”1 The jury rejected this argument and convicted Jimmy Dean Watkins of murder. However, during the punishment phase, it was asked to decide whether appellant had murdered his wife “in sudden passion” under Tex. Penal Code § 19.02(d).2 After lengthy delibera[267]*267tion, the jury concluded that Jimmy Dean Watkins had acted under the immediate influence of sudden passion in causing his wife’s death and it sentenced him to ten years community supervision. The State then indicted appellant for the attempted capital murder3 and attempted murder of Keith Fontenot, as well as aggravated assault with a deadly weapon.
Appellant filed a pretrial writ of habeas corpus, alleging that the doctrine of collateral estoppel bars relitigating the issue of his mental state and that the double jeopardy clause bars the State from prosecuting him for the attempted capital murder of Mr. Fontenot. The trial judge denied habeas relief. The Second Court of Appeals affirmed the trial court’s denial of relief on appellant’s double jeopardy claim, but reversed the trial court’s denial of relief on the collateral estoppel issue. Ex parte Watkins, 52 S.W.3d 858, 861 (Tex.App.-Fort Worth 2001). The State then filed a petition for discretionary review with this Court, arguing that the court of appeals erred in granting appellant collateral estoppel relief.4
II.
The doctrine of collateral estop-pel is embodied within the constitutional bar against double jeopardy.5 But the two are not identical.6 Double jeopardy bars any retrial of a criminal offense, while collateral estoppel bars any retrial of specific and discrete facts that have been fully and fairly adjudicated. Double jeopardy applies only to criminal cases,7 while collateral estoppel applies in both criminal and [268]*268civil proceedings.8 Thus, cases hinging on the doctrine of double jeopardy do not necessarily apply to a collateral estoppel claim and those hinging on the doctrine, of collateral estoppel do not necessarily apply to a claim of double jeopardy. The two doctrines are treated similarly, however, when a collateral estoppel claim is based on the constitutional rule set out in Ashe v. Swenson.
Under this constitutionally based doctrine of collateral estoppel, “when an issue of ultimate fact has once been determined by a valid and final judgment, that issue cannot again be litigated between the same parties in any future lawsuit.”9 That is, once a jury determines a discrete fact in favor of a criminal defendant, the State cannot contest the jury’s finding in a subsequent proceeding.10 In applying the doctrine of collateral estoppel, courts must first determine whether the jury determined a specific fact, and if so, how broad — in terms of time, space and content — was the scope of its finding. Before collateral estoppel will apply to bar relit-igation of a discrete fact, that fact must necessarily have been decided in favor of the defendant in the first trial.11 The mere possibility that a fact may have been determined in a former trial is insufficient to bar relitigation of that same fact in a second trial.12 In each case, courts must review the entire trial record, as well as the pleadings, the charge, and the arguments of the attorneys, to determine “with realism and rationality” precisely which facts the jury necessarily decided and [269]*269whether the scope of its findings regarding specific historical facts bars relitigation of those same facts in a second criminal trial.13
A general verdict returned in the guilt phase of a criminal trial frequently makes it difficult to determine precisely which historical facts a jury found to support an acquittal. This task is considerably less difficult when a jury is given special fact issues to determine.14 Some of these discrete factual issues are submitted to the jury at the guilt stage, while others are submitted at the punishment stage.15 On some of these factual issues, the State has the burden to prove the fact beyond a reasonable doubt, while on others the defendant has the burden to prove the fact by a preponderance of the evidence.16 The essential common characteristic is that the jury has found a specific, discrete historical fact. If the jury decides that fact in the defendant’s favor, the doctrine of collateral estoppel bars the State from relit-igating it in a second criminal trial.
III.
In this case, the jury was given a special issue at the punishment phase which specifically asked whether Jimmy Dean Watkins acted in the heat of sudden passion when he murdered his wife.17 The jury answered yes. Thus, the jury necessarily found that appellant acted in the heat of sudden passion when he murdered his wife. That fact cannot be relitigated. It is barred by collateral estoppel. A finding that appellant was acting under the immediate influence of sudden passion when he fatally shot his wife does not, of course, necessarily mean that the jury determined appellant was acting under that same influence approximately five minutes earlier when he shot Keith Fontenot.
In its petition for discretionary review, however, the State did not claim that, even if the doctrine of collateral estoppel does apply to the issue of “sudden passion,” these particular facts in this particular case nonetheless do not give rise to a collateral estoppel bar. Thus, we are not called upon to decide whether a rational [270]*270trier of fact could have found that appellant’s “sudden passion” state of mind at the time he murdered his wife was or could be different at the time he shot Keith Fontenot.18
Instead, the State, relying primarily upon the Supreme Court’s decision in Monge v. California,19 argues that the doctrine of collateral estoppel simply does not apply to any punishment fact or issue, period. Monge, however, concerns the doctrine of double jeopardy, not collateral estoppel,20 and moreover, the Supreme Court’s decision in Apprendi v. New Jersey21 has sharply limited Monge’s application.
In Monge, a sharply divided Supreme Court held that the double jeopardy clause does not bar retrial on a prior conviction allegation in the noncapital sentencing context.22 There the trial judge had found that the defendant had two prior convictions for “serious” felonies and sentenced Monge under California’s “three strikes” law.23 An intermediate appellate court, however, found that the sentencing proceeding did not contain proof beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant had personally inflicted great bodily injury or [271]*271used a deadly weapon during one of these prior offenses and that double jeopardy principles forbade the state from a retrial on the enhancement.24 The Supreme Court disagreed, noting that “[hjistorically we have found double jeopardy protections inapplicable to sentencing proceedings ... because the determinations at issue do not place a defendant in jeopardy for an ‘offense.’ ”25 Sentencing decisions favorable to a defendant, therefore, cannot generally be analogized to an acquittal of a criminal offense which would invoke the double jeopardy bar.26 But neither the reasoning nor result in Monge applies to a jury finding of a specific and discrete historical fact. A fact is a fact, regardless of whether it is determined during the guilt stage of a criminal trial or the punishment stage. As noted above, double jeopardy bars the retrial of a claim or offense in its entirety, while collateral estoppel bars only relit-igation of a discrete historical fact which has been previously determined.
Moreover, the reach of Monge was significantly curtailed by a sharply divided Court in Apprendi two years later. In the later case, the Supreme Court discussed the New Jersey “hate crime” enhancement statute and held that any specific “fact” that increases a criminal defendant’s sentence must be decided, beyond a reasonable doubt, by a jury.27 The Court distanced itself from Monge, noting that the double jeopardy principles as applied to prior enhancements are perhaps sui gener-is and that prior Supreme Court cases addressing recidivism statutes did not challenge the accuracy of the specific facts decided in those cases.28 Although Ap-prendi concerned only facts which increase a sentence, there is no logical reason to suppose that facts which decrease a sentence are less “factual” or less capable of being fully and finally adjudicated that those which increase the sentence.
In sum, Monge concerned the doctrine of double jeopardy rather than collateral estoppel and the decision in that case appears to be confined to double jeopardy dealing with prior convictions, not other punishment facts. With those two caveats, this and other Texas courts have followed Monge.29
[272]*272The State also argues that because “sudden passion” is no longer a guilt/innoeence fact, but rather a mitigating punishment fact, it is not a fact that is subject to collateral estoppel.30 This position does not make sense logically or legally. It also poses the risk expressed by Justice Scalia in his dissent in Monge: it raises the “sinister” specter of reconfiguring all criminal offenses into punishment facts to avoid any potential collateral estoppel or double jeopardy prohibition, as well as dispensing with proof beyond a reasonable doubt, right to a jury trial, etc.31 The State offers no logical rationale to explain why a specific fact decided at the punishment stage is any less of a fact than one decided at the guili/innocence stage, nor does it offer any precedent in support of its position.32
Finally, the State argues that collateral estoppel should not apply to a punishment fact because both the State and defendant might offer more or different evidence than they did at the first trial. In the second go-around, the State might “cross-examine, rebut or impeach pivotal defense ‘sudden passion’ witnesses” differently than it had before. True enough. But that is precisely the purpose of the double jeopardy and collateral estoppel prohibition; the State has one full and fair opportunity to prove its case and all discrete facts that support conviction and punishment. The first trial is not a try-out on the road to a second, third, or fourth.33
[273]*273IV.
The dissent suggests that we should, on our own motion, conclude that this collateral estoppel issue is not cognizable on a pretrial, writ of habeas corpus, even though neither the State nor appellant has ever argued that issue and neither the trial court nor the court of appeals addressed that issue. Although the dissent makes good arguments, those arguments ought not apply in this situation.
First, a claim of collateral estop-pel which is based upon constitutional double jeopardy principles is cognizable on a pretrial writ of habeas corpus, as is any double jeopardy claim.34 In Abney v. United States,35 the Supreme Court observed that the preferred procedural vehicle for review of a double jeopardy claim was a pretrial writ of habeas corpus because:
[T]he rights conferred on a criminal accused by the Double Jeopardy Clause would be significantly undermined if appellate review of double jeopardy claims were postponed until after conviction and sentence. To be sure, the Double Jeopardy Clause protects against being twice convicted for the same crime, and that aspect of the right can be fully vindicated on appeal following final judgment, as the Government suggests. However, the Court has long recognized that the Double Jeopardy Clause protects an individual against more than being subjected to double punishments. It is a guarantee against being twice put to trial for the same offense.36
The same logic and law apply to a collateral estoppel claim based on double jeopardy.37 When is a collateral estoppel claim based on double jeopardy principles? When the State could, but declines to, join two offenses which arise out of a single transaction and a final verdict or specific factual finding favorable to the defendant in the first prosecution would bar relit-igation of the same fact in a second proceeding.38
The cases on which the dissent relies in arguing that a habeas corpus claim is not cognizable unless it will result in “immediate release” do not involve this type of double jeopardy or collateral estoppel claim.39 Certainly, in many double jeopar[274]*274dy claims, the habeas petitioner will not receive any “immediate release” even if he prevails on his claim. For example, a person who asserts his fundamental right not to be punished again for the same offense when he has already been sentenced for that offense will not be “immediately released” if he prevails.40 His relief is nonetheless significant, in that he will only serve one sentence for one crime, not two sentences for that one crime. The dissent cites no double-jeopardy or Ashe v. Swenson collateral estoppel precedent for its conclusion that a pretrial writ of habeas corpus claim is not cognizable unless it will result in the “immediate release” of the applicant.
Of course, the reverse is equally true: we cite no precedent that holds that a collateral estoppel claim may be brought via a pretrial writ of habeas corpus when relief would not result in “immediate relief,” i.e., the dismissal of charges. However, we do note that at least some federal courts have addressed collateral estoppel issues in a pretrial forum even though a favorable resolution of the matter did not result in dismissal of charges.41 Because the very purpose of collateral estoppel is to bar to relitigation of a particular fact [275]*275which has already been fully and finally decided, it seems the better course to address the constitutional issue pretrial, especially since neither the State nor the lower courts in this case contended that pretrial habeas review was improper.
The dissent next argues that a determination that collateral estoppel bars the re-litigation of the “sudden passion” issue in any subsequent prosecution of appellant “does not impede the prosecution.” Yes and no. The State certainly may prosecute appellant for attempted murder or attempted capital murder, but it may not relitigate the issue of sudden passion.42
The dissent concludes that “evaluation of the merits may be assisted by factual development of the record,” meaning another trial with new, more and better evidence offered by the State. But that is precisely what the principle of double jeopardy-collateral estoppel bars. The State is not entitled to a second opportunity to prove what it failed to prove in the first trial.43
V.
In sum, we conclude that collateral es-toppel bars the State from relitigating the issue of “sudden passion” in a trial concerning the shooting of Keith Fontenot, because the jury in the first trial found that appellant acted under “sudden passion” in murdering his wife and because the State did not claim, or indicate any evidence to show, that a rational jury could conclude that appellant’s state of mind changed in the five minutes between the two shootings.
Therefore, we affirm the decision by the Second Court of Appeals and remand this case to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
KELLER, P.J., filed a dissenting opinion in which WOMACK, KEASLER and HERVEY, JJ., joined.