Disposed is a generic legal term meaning the case or proceeding is completed. Disposition is used in reference to the way in which the case was resolved. Some examples of the disposition of a case are: conviction, acquittal, dismissal, etc., ?not to be confused with a verdict, which is guilty or not guilty. Each case moved to the 'disposed' section of each sub-forum will have the cases reference to how it was resolved, locked, and either left for archive or evidence in an appellate hearing.
This does not mean your case was ignored, it simply means the case is finished, the jury/judge resolved it and either came up with a verdict or not, depending on how the case was resolved.
You are reading far too much into disposed.
There could have been a settlement agreed by the parties prior to judgement and that would make the motion moot, but equally the motion becomes moot when the counterclaim was dismissed as the in limne motion would then have no relevance and be moot. If the counterclaim was to proceed then the motion would either have needed to be granted or denied.
All we can be sure of is the EEGC counter claim is dead. It would be very strange to go through a trial and then decide to settle.
There will be more information produced on how the case was disposed.