No; Contextual::Return always returns a Contextual::Return::Value object in scalar context. That's part of the mechanism that allows it to work; when the function is running it can't predict, say, whether the result will be used as a string or a boolean, so it returns an object that overloads both.
If $foo is an object, you shouldn't be peeking at $foo->{name} anyway; write an accessor so that you can do $foo->name.
If you're after wantarray-on-crack, then Want might be more to your liking.
package Cow { use Moo; has name => (is => 'lazy', default => sub { 'Mooington' }) } say Cow->new->name
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