My logic runs thus:
Using the conventional means to determine roll centre height, the projected instantaneous centre of motion of each wheel is an infinite distance away to the side. A line connecting that centre to the contact patch will therefore be at ground level (because it connects to the contact patch). Therefore the roll centre must be at ground level. This is only true when there is no roll in the body (try to draw the diagram with some roll in!).
In a more intuitive vien, any lateral force applied to the body above ground level will cause an increase in vertical load at the outboard wheel. As the wheel can only move vertically (relative to the body) the suspension will compress and the body will roll.
Force applied at ground level produces no increase in vertical load, so no roll.
Another way to look at it is as a simple system of two vertical sliding pillars, each pin jointed at the contact patch. The body can slide on each pillar. The only centres of rotation are at ground level, the pillars must remain parallel, so the centre of body rotation must be at ground level.
I can picture this in my head - when Eng-Tips installs the direct brain interface these explanations will be a doddle!
Pete.