Deletion/closure is the only thing that auto-validates a flag. As such, if the task is actually something along the lines of locking/editing, then it will have to be done separately from the actual dismissal of the flag. Depending on the task, it may be done such that the dismissal is done, then the corrective act. As such, in some cases, if you just have the right timing, you may see what looks like a blank dismissal.
Perhaps the more pertinent point is that dismissing a flag as valid specifically means that your flag was not noise and had a functional use. It doesn't necessarily mean that the moderator agrees with the action you have suggested to be taken, but you flagged while attempting to enforce what is understood of the rules thus making it valid. The more common case of a non-matching flag that is valid may be if one person suggests one close reason but the moderator selects another one.
The case shown here is also plausible - the moderator sees the flag and deems that you were doing your responsibility in highlighting what you believe to be a problem, but disagreed that the post is not constructive. A moderator still had to investigate the question and make sure everything is in order, so even if the resolution was different, the purpose of the flag (to get moderator attention) was valid.