As far as official policy goes, you're not going to hear much other than "users are allowed to vote however they damn well please, except for a few exceptions classified as 'voting fraud'." This is obviously not voting fraud. As for what you are officially encouraged to vote on, all you really have to go on is the voting tooltip:
This question does not show any research effort; it is not useful or unclear
Beyond that all we have is unofficial guidelines (which is generally just telling you how many other people choose to vote, not how anyone should vote) and individual users' opinions on the matter.
Do spelling/grammar issues result in a post not having been sufficiently researched? On SO, probably never. On English Language & Usage, perhaps, but not here.
Is it possible for spelling/grammar issues to cause a post to be unclear? I certainly would imagine so. Is every post with any grammar error unclear? No. At what point is the grammar sufficiently problematic as to make a post unclear? That's hard to say. Really it's best to just take posts on a case by case basis. When the grammar is bad enough that you become unclear as to what is being asked, that's when you bring in the downvote hammer.
Do spelling/grammar issues cause a post to be not useful? In bad enough cases, I can see that being the case. When the problems are just so distracting, so cumbersome, etc. that it inhibits my ability to answer the question/have my question answered, then it reduces the usefulness of the post, possibly to the point of being not useful at all. As with the above case, when is it bad enough that you think it actually merits a downvote? Well, that's something that you simply need to determine for yourself on a case by case basis.
Of course, as is noted by Robert these types of problems in a post may not be the reason that the post is bad, but rather simply be a good indicator that a post has other problems that make it bad. If the post contains a lot of sloppily written text it may be worth considering if the actual content itself was not well prepared.