On February 2, 2006, a petition for temporary letters of guardianship for two minor children hereinafter Children was filed in the probate court by their maternal grandmother hereinafter Grandmother. Attached to the petition was a temporary relinquishment of rights signed by Children’s parents hereinafter Parents. Temporary letters of guardianship were issued. Parents subsequently filed a petition to terminate the temporary guardianship, and Grandmother objected. After a hearing, the probate court struck as unconstitutional two provisions in the recently revised guardianship code, OCGA § § 29-1-1 et seq., which became effective on July 1, 2005. As a direct result of that decision, the probate court, in the same order, granted the petition to terminate the guardianship. Grandmother filed a notice of direct appeal to the Court of Appeals, which transferred the appeal to this Court as coming within our exclusive jurisdiction over all cases in which the constitutionality of a law has been drawn in question. Ga. Const. of 1983, Art. VI, Sec. VI, Par. II 1; OCGA § § 5-3-2 b, 15-9-123; In re E.P.M. , 189 Ga. App. 770 377 SE2d 535 1989. It is well established that this Court does not ever ” ‘pass upon the constitutionality of an Act of the General Assembly unless it clearly appears in the record that the point was directly and properly made in the court below and distinctly passed on by the trial judge. Cits.’ Cits.” Pitts v. G.M.A.C. , 231 Ga. 54, 56 199 SE2d 902 1973. Here, the probate court distinctly passed on the constitutionality of provisions of the guardianship statute. However, in considering whether the issue was directly and properly raised for consideration by the probate court, we note that the petition to terminate the guardianship did not make any constitutional challenge. Indeed, “ no constitutional question was raised in the trial court in the pleadings or any other portion of the record.” Walker v. Hall , 226 Ga. 68-69 172 SE2d 411 1970. There is not any transcript of the hearing, as the parties agreed that the probate court’s order accurately represents the evidence. R. 57 Moreover, even assuming that a constitutional question had been asserted at that time, it was “not properly raised by mere oral argument.” Gant v. Gant , 254 Ga. 239, 240 1 327 SE2d 723 1985.