Cookies owes $8.4 million to partner on San Francisco cannabis store
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July 10, 2025
Prominent cannabis brand Cookies is on the hook to pay its former partner on a failed San Francisco marijuana store $8.4 million, according to court records.
The significant payout due to the Cole Ashbury Group – Cookies’ former partner at the Berner’s on Haight store that closed last year after opening to great fanfare in December 2019 – is the result of a “put option” baked into the two parties’ licensing agreement, according to an earlier arbitration ruling upheld on June 30.
The April 2025 arbitration ruling, which awarded Cole Ashbury $7.3 million in damages plus more than $1.1 million in attorney’s fees and costs, was first reported by Blurred Culture.
Retired San Francisco Superior Court Judge Harold Kahn finalized the ruling June 30, records show.
Representatives from the Cole Ashbury Group, which operated the first cannabis store in San Francisco licensed under the city’s marijuana social equity program, did not immediately respond to an MJBizDaily request for comment.
In a statement to SFGate, Parker Berling, San Rafael, Calif.-based Cookies’ president, said the company “respects” the decision but will consider “all available options.”
$10M ‘put option’ as part of store licensing agreement
According to the findings from the arbitrator – retired San Francisco Superior Court Judge David Garcia – the two parties’ November 2019 licensing agreement included a “put option” that, if exercised, required Cookies to buy out Cole Ashbury Group for $10 million.
That valuation was based on average sales in that era, before some of the publicized struggles affecting the regulated marijuana industry set in, Garcia wrote.
That option could be activated if Cole Ashbury Group maintained its license to use Cookies’ branding and iconic strains for 42 months, according to the agreement.
Cole Ashbury Group exercised that option on May 22, 2023, but Cookies refused to pay, leading to an October 2024 arbitration hearing that Garcia oversaw, according to court records.
In the meantime, Cookies revoked the store’s permission to use its branding.
The rebranded store, called Blaze on Haight, closed sometime after the relationship with Cookies ended in early 2024.
Cookies must ‘suffer the consequences’ of a bad deal
In the arbitration proceedings, Cookies tried to argue:
The store was mismanaged.
Shawn Richard, the store’s equity owner, violated the terms of the licensing agreement with alleged misbehavior, including a pending sexual harassment lawsuit.
Richard has denied any wrongdoing in that lawsuit, which is still ongoing, records show.
Cookies also contended that the store, which allegedly failed to turn a profit despite a prime location in San Francisco’s iconic Haight-Ashbury neighborhood and never paid Cookies any licensing fees, was worthless.
But Garcia dismissed those arguments, noting in his February ruling that Cookies never moved to revoke the store’s licensing agreement.
And though “the belief that the storefront in the iconic Haight-Ashbury was destined for success was unfounded,” that did not invalidate the put option, he added.
“The usual consequence of making a bad deal is to suffer the consequences.”
Garcia noted that the store’s struggles are likely the result of “a governmental regulatory failure that has been complicated by local and state governments that have contributed to the problem by perhaps overtaxing and over permitting cannabis dispensaries.”
The situation follows Cookies’ significant win in a separate arbitration proceeding with another retail partner.
In those proceedings, in which Garcia also served as arbitrator, Cookies was awarded $22.7 million from Cookies Retail, an alter-ego of Los Angeles- based TRP Co., for unpaid royalty fees and “misuse of trademarks.”
Court records show that Cookies Retail is attempting to invalidate that ruling.
A hearing is scheduled for July 14.
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