Diner regular tips staff $3,000 on $39 check just in time for the holidays

It's not about the money for this man who's honoring his late mother.

ByABC News
December 18, 2017, 4:13 PM
Dwayne Clark, CEO of Aegis Living, and Julie Welsand, a waitress at the Brief Encounter Cafe, on Dec. 18th, 2017, when Clark went back to visit the diner staff after he left a $3,000 dollar tip for their hard work around the holidays.
Dwayne Clark, CEO of Aegis Living, and Julie Welsand, a waitress at the Brief Encounter Cafe, on Dec. 18th, 2017, when Clark went back to visit the diner staff after he left a $3,000 dollar tip for their hard work around the holidays.
Courtesy Charlotte Starck

— -- A frequent customer stunned the employees at a Washington state diner this weekend with a tip that far exceeded the recommended 20 percent.

He tipped the staff $3,000 on a $39 check at the Brief Encounter restaurant in Bellevue.

"At first, they didn't know who it was," diner owner Melanie Bard said of her mystified employees.

The 12-person staff initially thought it was a mistake, but the back of the receipt spelled out a story from the big tipper:

PHOTO: On the receipt Dwayne Clark wrote, "You guys do a great job! When I was 7, I washed dishes and my mom cooked in a diner like this, we were dirt poor and didn't have money for Christmas. Hopefully, this will help all of you have a better Christmas."
Dwayne Clark wrote out a thank you note on the back of his receipt, "You guys do a great job! When I was 7, I washed dishes and my mom cooked in a diner like this, we were dirt poor and didn't have money for Christmas. Hopefully, this will help all of you have a better Christmas."

"You guys do a great job! When I was 7, I washed dishes and my mom cooked in a diner like this. We were dirt poor and didn't have money for Christmas. Hopefully, this will help all of you have a better Christmas," the customer wrote.

Bard said she knew it was Dwayne Clark, CEO and founder of Aegis Living, an assisted living community, who comes in to eat regularly on the weekends with his wife.

"He's a great customer when he comes in," Bard said, adding that he has been coming in for the past eight years.

PHOTO: Dwayne Clark, CEO of Aegis Living, (man in booth) has been a regular with his wife (sitting across from him) at the Brief Encounter Cafe in Bellevue, Washington for eight years.
Dwayne Clark, CEO of Aegis Living, (man in the booth) has been a regular with his wife (sitting across from him in the booth) at the Brief Encounter Cafe in Bellevue, Washington for eight years, and Saturday, Dec. 16th, he left the small diner staff a generous tip of $3,000 dollars.

Clark said he wanted to “do something in appreciation of my mother, who's not with us anymore, and because of the Christmas season.”

He remembers tagging along with his mother as she worked in the food service industry to provide for him and his three siblings, putting all four of them through college.

"I saw how hard my mom worked for people who weren't always appreciative," Clark said.

PHOTO: Dwayne Clark, CEO of Aegis Living, eating his usual breakfast at the Brief Encounter Cafe in Bellevue, Washington, on Dec. 18th after he left a generous tip for the staff over the weekend.
Dwayne Clark, CEO of Aegis Living, eating his usual breakfast at the Brief Encounter Cafe in Bellevue, Washington, on Dec. 18th after he left a generous tip for the staff over the weekend.
PHOTO: The front of the Brief Encounter Cafe, owned by Melanie Bard, in Bellevue, Washington, where Dwayne Clark left the staff a generous tip.
The front of the Brief Encounter Cafe, owned by Melanie Bard, in Bellevue, Washington, where Dwayne Clark left the staff a generous tip.

Clark left the tip with Julie Welsand, his waitress at the diner Saturday, a spokeswoman for his company said

The staff will split the tip evenly, $250 each, as Clark requested, which Bard said helps them out the gift-giving season.

Neither Welsand nor the other employees was available to speak with ABC News.

Clark stressed that this is isn't about the amount of money he gave, but instead about the sentiment behind it.

"You don't have to give money. You can write appreciative notes and say thank you," he said of wanting to inspire a tipping movement this holiday season. "It would go a long way to nourish all of us."

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