Love's Oven v. Walters

CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 17, 2025
Docket24CA0682
StatusUnpublished

This text of Love's Oven v. Walters (Love's Oven v. Walters) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Love's Oven v. Walters, (Colo. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

24CA0682 Love’s Oven v Walters 07-17-2025

COLORADO COURT OF APPEALS

Court of Appeals No. 24CA0682 City and County of Denver District Court No. 22CV33347 Honorable Andrew J. Luxen, Judge

Love’s Oven, LLC, a Colorado limited liability company,

Plaintiff-Appellant,

v.

Marc Walters a/k/a Marc Waltzer, and Richard Waltzer a/k/a Rich Walters,

Defendants-Appellees,

JUDGMENT AFFIRMED

Division II Opinion by JUDGE FOX Harris and Schutz, JJ., concur

NOT PUBLISHED PURSUANT TO C.A.R. 35(e) Announced July 17, 2025

Richards Carrington, LLC, Todd E. Mair, Michael N. Mulvania, Benjamin W. Hudgens, Denver, Colorado, for Plaintiff-Appellant

The Cross Law Firm, Dan S. Cross, Denver, Colorado, for Defendants-Appellees ¶1 After obtaining a judgment against Cloud 9 Confections, LLC

(Cloud 9), Love’s Oven, LLC (Love’s Oven) brought a separate action

to pierce Cloud 9’s limited liability company (LLC) veil and hold

Marc Walters, a/k/a Marc Waltzer, and Richard Waltzer, a/k/a

Rich Walters, personally liable for the judgment.1 The district court

declined to pierce the LLC veil, and Love’s Oven appeals. We affirm.

I. Background

¶2 Love’s Oven is a licensed, Colorado-based manufacturer of

edible marijuana-infused products. Love’s Oven sells its products

to retailers (marijuana dispensaries) who then distribute the

products to consumers. It operates primarily as a family business.

Peggy Moore is the primary owner and CEO, and Joshua Nettles —

Moore’s son — is a partner. Moore and Nettles met Marc in 2017

through a mutual friend. At the time, Marc — who had been

working in the food industry for several decades — had a concept

for marijuana-infused gelato, so Marc and Nettles discussed a

potential relationship in which Love’s Oven would manufacture

1 Given the circumstances surrounding their surnames, which we

discuss below, for purposes of clarity we refer to the appellees by their first names, Marc and Rich. We mean no disrespect in doing so.

1 Marc’s gelato products. Ultimately, Love’s Oven decided against a

gelato product, but it was interested in a concept that Marc pitched

for marijuana-infused chocolate.

¶3 At some point during the conversations with Love’s Oven,

Marc asked his brother, Rich, to help finance the potential business

opportunity. Marc and Rich decided to form Cloud 9 to conduct

business with Love’s Oven. Cloud 9 was registered as a Colorado

LLC on March 26, 2018. Rich was the LLC’s sole member. Due to

a divorce and past legal issues, Marc did not want his name on

Cloud 9’s founding documents. Marc’s past also prompted him to

petition to change his name from Marc Craig Waltzer to Marc

Walters, which a Nevada court granted in September 2018, after

Cloud 9’s formation.

¶4 As to Cloud 9’s operations, Rich and Marc agreed that, while

the brothers occasionally “wore different hats,” Marc was effectively

Cloud 9’s president. Marc held himself out to Love’s Oven as Cloud

9’s founder and president.

¶5 On April 30, 2018, Cloud 9 and Love’s Oven entered into a

licensing agreement (the Contract) that granted Love’s Oven the

right to use the intellectual property (IP) needed to create the

2 chocolate products, in exchange for royalty fees. Under the

Contract — contingent on approval from Colorado’s Marijuana

Enforcement Division (MED) — Cloud 9 would provide Love’s Oven

with the IP, recipes, standard operating procedures (SOPs),

ingredients, and all materials and information needed to develop

the chocolate products. Love’s Oven believed that Cloud 9 owned

the IP, but the undisputed evidence showed that Marc owned the IP

and “loaned” it to Cloud 9 via a verbal loan agreement.2 Love’s

Oven did not manufacture chocolates when the parties’ business

relationship began, so Marc provided the recipes and SOPs and

trained Love’s Oven employees on how to manufacture the

chocolates and how to use the necessary equipment. The Love’s

Oven facility also changed significantly to accommodate chocolate

manufacturing.

2 Marc and Rich emphasize language in the Contract that Cloud 9

“owns, or otherwise has the right to grant licenses with respect to the Licensed [IP].” However, Moore testified that Love’s Oven believed Cloud 9 owned the IP and would not have “enter[ed] into an agreement with someone who did not own the rights to the [IP].” Therefore, even if Marc gave Cloud 9 the right to license the IP, Cloud 9 at worst misrepresented that it owned the IP and at best failed to inform Love’s Oven that Marc was the true owner.

3 ¶6 The parties performed under the Contract for several months,

but in the spring of 2019, Moore became suspicious of Marc and

Rich. Love’s Oven had been unsuccessfully pressing Cloud 9 to

complete the MED paperwork. Cloud 9’s counsel at the time

represented that Cloud 9 did not need to complete the MED

application, which included a background check, but Moore

testified that MED told her Cloud 9’s application was required.

Moore suspected that Marc and Rich were stalling on the MED

application to avoid the extensive background check process. She

then discovered that Rich’s last name was Waltzer and suspected

that Marc’s last name was also Waltzer; her research revealed

Marc’s former last name and prior legal troubles.

¶7 Despite these concerns, Love’s Oven continued to work with

Cloud 9 until approximately September 2019 when Moore told

Cloud 9 that Love’s Oven would withhold royalty payments until

Cloud 9 completed the MED application.3 In November 2019, Cloud

9 sued Love’s Oven for, among other things, breaching the Contract

3 Moore testified that Love’s Oven continued to work with Cloud 9 in

part because she was afraid to terminate the Contract in light of Marc’s past and Cloud 9’s prior threats to sue Love’s Oven.

4 by withholding royalty payments. Love’s Oven raised several

counterclaims, including fraud. The case went to trial in 2020 but

resulted in a mistrial. On November 1, 2021, the district court

entered a stipulated judgment in which Cloud 9 agreed to the entry

of a $500,000 judgment against it on Love’s Oven’s fraud

counterclaim.

¶8 In November 2022, after Cloud 9 failed to satisfy the

judgment, Love’s Oven brought this action to pierce the LLC veil

and hold Marc and Rich personally liable for the $500,000

judgment. The district court rejected the claim, and Love’s Oven

appeals.

¶9 On appeal, Love’s Oven contends that the district court erred

by holding that the first and third prongs in the three-part veil

piercing inquiry were not satisfied. We affirm.

II. Analysis

A. Standard of Review and Applicable Law

¶ 10 Whether to pierce the corporate veil is “a mixed question of law

and fact.” Stockdale v. Ellsworth, 2017 CO 109, ¶ 17 (citation

omitted). Under this standard, “[w]e defer to the trial court’s

findings of fact if they are supported by the record, but [we] review

5 the trial court’s legal conclusions de novo.” Id. (first alteration in

original) (citation omitted). In other words, we review factual

findings for clear error. Sentinel Colo. v. Rodriguez, 2023 COA 118,

¶ 18 (“A court’s finding of fact is clearly erroneous if there is no

support for it in the record.”) (citation omitted) (cert. granted in part

July 22, 2024).

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Love's Oven v. Walters, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loves-oven-v-walters-coloctapp-2025.