Yes, it's definitely in violation of site policy (and in fact, network-wide policy) to use a sock-puppet account to upvote one's own content.
While it's true that there is no reputation to be gained from having one's Meta posts upvoted, there are other very measurable benefits. For example, with enough upvotes in a particular tag, one gets a gold tag-badge, which allows the holder to close posts on Meta as duplicates unilaterally. This is a very powerful privilege to have, and should absolutely not be gained through sock-puppetry. There may very well be other advantages to be gained from upvotes on Meta posts, changing the apparent approval of a post being one of the less obvious ones, as you pointed out.
The general principle is that one is not allowed to engage in any activity that one could not do with a single account, and that principle applies as much to Meta as to Main. Engaging in such behavior is not allowed, and the user may face suspensions, or other penalties if they are caught doing this.
The specific example that made you ask this question may or may not be due to a sock-puppet account; only CMs can actually know that for sure, and they usually only investigate cases where there is a reasonable suspicion of a pattern of such activity. In any case, if you do suspect that there is something untoward going on, you should raise a custom flag and explain the situation. I strongly suggest not discussing specific examples on Meta as it mostly leads to unproductive speculation about the situation.