The jury at the Stardust fire inquests has reached its verdicts, which will be delivered from 2pm tomorrow at the Dublin District Coroner's Court.
The jury informed the coroner, Dr Myra Cullinane, that they had reached their findings shortly after she told them she would accept a majority decision.
Dr Cullinane then told the jury members that because the proceedings were an inquest and not a trial, she would be deferring the announcement of the verdicts until tomorrow to allow for certain administrative procedures and to allow family members of the victims to attend court or observe online.
The jurors have been told they must not discuss their deliberations or their findings with anyone before they return to court tomorrow.
Dr Cullinane said that doing so would undermine the process they have been involved in over the past year and could even amount to a contempt of court.
Earlier today Dr Cullinane asked the foreman if they had reached a verdict on which all members agreed.
He replied: "No."
She then asked, having deliberated for the last ten days, if he thought it was possible that they could reach a unanimous verdict.
"No," he told the court.
The coroner then said legislation allows her to accept a majority verdict in these circumstances - one in which seven or more of the 12 jurors agree.
This morning, the 12 jurors began their 11th day of deliberations.
Briefly addressing the coroner at the start of today's proceedings, the foreman said the jury still had "some issues" that needed to be "ironed out" and that they still needed time.
The 12-person jury, made up of seven women and five men, initially retired to consider its verdicts on Wednesday 3 April.
The court had previously heard how the jury had been given a questionnaire to be filled out dealing with each individual victim, and another set of questions dealing with the circumstances of the fire.
Forty-eight people, aged 16-27, died in the St Valentines Day disaster, 43 years ago.
In all, these fresh inquests sat for 122 days and heard testimony from 370 witnesses.
They got under way last April after a direction from the Attorney General who said that there had been an insufficiency of inquiry at the original inquests which were held in 1982.
The move followed a sustained campaign by the families.
In her charge to the jury last month, the coroner told the jury that there were five verdicts open to them - accidental death, death by misadventure, unlawful killing, an open verdict or a narrative verdict.