Having the context of the question helps when reviewing the quality of the answer, but the fact that the question is closed or deleted is not a reason to impact your decision in the queue.
In this particular situation, you have fallen a victim to a bad audit. This is a very tricky post and ideally should not be used as an audit in LQP.
The post was deleted as spam by one of the moderators based on the first revision. https://stackoverflow.com/revisions/12824062/1
I assume there was more at play here (probably multiple spam posts linking to the same website) and the reason why a mod decided to delete it might never be revealed to us, but it is clear that the post was very suspicious and if it was not deleted I would definitely flag it for moderator's attention. If you check the poster's profile you can see their personal blog site. If you check the revisions you can see the code came from that website. While it is not a reason to cast a spam flag, it is definitely supposed to raise a red flag in your head.
This is also what you, as a reviewer should do. You need to pay as much attention to the post as possible and try to find out why is it in the queue and if anything (including flagging) should be done. If you check the revision and you see that some third party pasted in a code from the author's offsite link, then it would be the basis for a rollback and mod-flag. However, have you checked the revisions you would see the post is deleted as spam and then it would be a formality to click recommend deletion.
Audits are meant to stop you and make you think, but also to teach you what to pay attention to when curating the content. You have done well by coming to Meta to ask and learn. Great job!