First and foremost, we can't read minds, so it's impossible to know why individual voters voted the way they did. Votes are anonymous, and only the voter knows why they voted one way or another.
In a more general sense, without a specific example of a "reasonable question that doesn't have code and still gets down-votes", it is very difficult to argue with your premise.
So far, I'm sorry, but I believe is mostly false. Some good questions get down-voted, with or without code; but I do not think it is a generalized problem but freak instances.
Many questions lacking code may receive down-votes because they show no research, or they are too broad, or they are eminently unclear. Or all of the above.
This is a programming Q&A site. While there are a lot of good questions without code... most of the time good questions will require some code to be understandable and useful.