Recently Hans Passant made a comment on my question.
This tends to happen when you post a question and add a bounty to it. You asked for attention, and you got it. And considering Hans is an expert on Windows programming, it's hard to imagine how this could ever be a bad thing.
The comment is misleading others. I even received an answer based on this comment which is not relevant.
That is not the fault of the commenter, but rather the fault of the others who are being "misled". There is absolutely no evidence that he commented with the express intent of being misleading.
If you want to argue that his comment is incorrect, either add a reply of your own or (preferably) update the question to incorporate your response.
Honestly, this should have been your first move upon receiving a comment from someone. Even if they're wrong, others are likely to be confused about the same sort of things. Especially if your question has a bounty attached to it and is going to be attracting extra attention. Presumably, you want to increase your odds of getting a helpful answer. Burying your head in the sand and asking him to remove the comment does little to increase these odds.
it drew me a few down vote.
Well, one of those downvotes was mine. I also upvoted Hans's comment, because it was an excellent summary of the reasons why I was (a) confused about your question, and (b) electing to downvote it.
I had arrived at precisely the same conclusions as Hans while reading the question, before ever getting to the comments at the bottom. I had been mentally composing a similar comment of my own. His remarks did not influence my evaluation of the question; I only found that I agreed with him after independently drawing the same conclusion.
Whether this means we are both complete ignoramuses when it comes to Windows UI programming, or whether it means that your question is unclear and contains erroneous assumptions, is something that you'll have to decide.
He made two comments. After flagging, they removed one but still the misleading one is there.
I see that he removed at least one of his comments. It was there when I looked at the question before going to bed last night, but it is gone now. The comment remains is the one that is both helpful and correct. Again, directing your ire at the comment and/or the commenter is unproductive.
It is also somewhat rude. You do not have the right to "control" who leaves comments on your questions.
What should we do if a comment by top user is misleading other users?
Address their concerns by editing the question. Or simply ignore their comment. Your choice.
The "top"-ness of the user is irrelevant. And if it wasn't already clear from my remarks above, I very much resent your implication that the people who downvoted your question were simply doing so because of Hans's reputation score.
You are making the classic mistake that so many askers do: you start out assuming that you know everything about the problem domain and that all of your assumptions are correct. This is setting yourself up for failure. If you are in a position where you have to ask for help, you are probably not right about everything. Not that there's anything wrong with that—none of us knows everything. But getting stuck and having to ask for help should imply a little bit of humility and willingness to re-evaluate your assumptions.