TL;DR
This isn't a special case. If you can post an answer that is useful and addresses the question and isn't just covering ground covered by other answers (on that question or another one), you should post it. Making a Stack Overflow answer useful usually (though not always) requires code, and code must be marked up properly. If you "can't" do that, don't post an answer. But you can do that.
Details
should anyone refrain from answering if they can't format an answer, no matter the reason?
The only way a person can't format an answer is if the device they're using is missing a way to enter the necessary markdown formatting characters. I know of no such devices. (The only character I can think of that might be hard to find on a device is the backtick, which is only needed for inline code markup. Even on my ancient Samsung Galaxy [I dug it up], the backtick is readily accessible: I hit the button for symbols, and then the button for the second page of symbols, and there it is. But that's only needed for inline code; code blocks require nothing but spaces.)
So really, the question contains a logical fallacy. :-) It's asking what someone should do if they can't do X, when they can do X.
So, two answers:
No, don't post an answer if you cannot format the answer sufficiently. Perhaps post a comment suggesting what the answer might be.
But:
Yes, you should post an answer (subject to the usual rules of usefulness) — because you can format it sufficiently.
Note that "sufficiently" needn't be all-singing, all-dancing. It may not be as thoroughly-formatted as you'd've done if you'd been sitting at a computer. But at a minimum, code must be marked up to be clear (four spaces per line, not challenging), and in general if clarity suffers for lack of formatting, that means said formatting is necessary.