A user is in no way required to accept or even read your answer regardless of whether their account still active or not.
Moreover, the whole idea behind StackExchange is posting answers that potentially benefit further readers as well rather than just the OP and getting rep from the users you helped.
So,
- If the user is no longer active, you didn't help them so there's no reason to accept the answer
- Asking anyone to accept an answer on another's behalf is out of question at SE
- The SE system is made so that if your answer is useful enough, it should gain you rep regardless
...If you think about it, the "accept an answer on another's behalf" is not so out of question, theoretically... We simply need to maintain that you "helped" the person accepting, too. So, one could possibly "take over" the quesiton... and voila! Right?
Maybe. Because we also need to justify you getting more rep than for an upvote. What can that be (specifically, why does an acceptance give more rep in the first place?)?
- the OP asked the question, thus giving you a chance to earn some rep in the first place (but that's a reward for them). You helped them more than other upvoters by giving an answer tailored for their specific needs. Then the other person should have exactly the same needs.
the tick signifies that
- the answer fully resolves the matter at hand rather than just "being useful" (a direct quotation from the upvote link's popup tip)
- the problem outlined in the question has been resolved
For this, no one is qualified to make these statements except the OP and, again, someone with exactly the same problem.
So, we need a way to
- identify someone with exactly the same need (which includes providing objective proof of that), and
- justify them being qualified to operate the original question (rather than their own one if they posted a duplicate, for example). E.g. should they also qualify to be targeted by further votes? What about the original author?
I've no idea how we can possibly do this, so, if you're so much interested in seeing this implementing, it's up to you from here.