OPINION
Appellant pled guilty to felony theft and pursuant to a plea bargain agreement, was sentenced to one year confinement. On the same day he was sentenced, appellant’s special plea of double jeopardy was denied. The plea asserted that appellant was previously convicted on several charges of issuance of bad checks, and that those convictions arose from the same transaction as the charges for felony theft. Appellant now contends that the trial court erred in *270 failing to grant his special plea of double jeopardy. We affirm.
The record reveals that the trial court granted permission to appeal the double jeopardy issue. Appellant’s notice of appeal, however, does not specify that the trial court gave such permission or that the plea of double jeopardy was raised by written motion and ruled on prior to trial. Thus, it does not comply with appellate procedure for appealing nonjurisdictional defects after a guilty plea. Tex.R.App.P. 40(b). However, we will address the merits of appellant’s point both because courts have found double jeopardy to be a jurisdictional defect and because the trial court apparently intended to allow such an appeal.
Rodriguez v. State,
This case deals with the second guarantee against double jeopardy, protection from a second prosecution for the same offense after conviction.
Illinois v. Vitale,
Appellant was prosecuted under Texas Penal Code 31.03 for felony theft and under 32.41 for issuance of bad checks. These offenses are not the “same” by the standards of
Blockburger
because each offense requires proof of an element which the other does not.
Blockburger v. United States,
Furthermore, the issuance of a bad check statute provides that an offense under that section is not a greater or lesser included offense of felony theft. TexPe-nal Code 31.03, 32.41(a), (g) (Vernon Supp. 1988). The legislature obviously intended that the same act might result in prosecution for both offenses. Regardless of this intent, if the state sought to rely on facts previously litigated in the bad check charge for proof of its theft charge, a double jeopardy problem would be raised in this case.
January v. State,
Appellant’s plea of double jeopardy included attachments of copies of records from the justice court, by which he sought to prove that prior convictions for issuance of bad checks arose from the same transaction as the charge against him for felony theft. The state argues that these attachments were not admitted as evidence at the hearing on appellant’s plea of double jeopardy and thus cannot be considered on appeal. However, even if we assume the
*271
attachments were admitted as evidence, they fail to show that the prior charges for issuance of bad checks resulted in final judgments or involved the same facts as those underlying the theft charges.
Shaffer v. State, 477
S.W.2d 873 (Tex.Crim.App.1971). For instance, the attachments from the justice courts do not show that appellant was found guilty of any offenses, or that appellant issued bad checks to any person named as a complainant in the felony theft indictment. The mere possibility that the state would rely on the facts admitted in the prior case is insufficient to bar the second prosecution.
Illinois v. Vitale,
We find no error in the trial court’s failure to grant appellant’s plea of double jeopardy. Appellant’s point of error is overruled.
Judgment is affirmed.
