Leaving fake bills that are obviously fake like that is really the same as leaving nothing at all but a rude message.
I don't think anyone can tell for sure if any such person who
leaves these fake bills does it as a way to propagate their religious beliefs, or to be a cheapskate with an «excuse», but the bottom line is they're leaving fake bills instead of real bills, and it's not cool to the servers.
I've been reading that in the US there's a thing where certain kinds of people
leave fake bills with just a corner showing just the dollar amount and the rest hidden under a napkin or peeking out of the check holder, but upon closer inspection turns out to be not real money.
Not exact matches
Quite often, instead of a tip, people who wore Christian t - shirts and asked their servers for «prayer requests» would then
leave a gospel tract or one of those
fake «$ 1,000,000»
bills with the gospel on the back instead of any sort of tip.
How Billionaire
Bill Koch Fights
Fake Wine Maybe it goes back to my childhood, Koch says by telephone from his ranch outside Paonia, Colorado, pausing to say goodbye to his 8 - year - old daughter as she
leaves for school.
He also perpetrated one of the great literary hoaxes, placing
fake newspaper ads seeking Irving's fictitious Dutch historian, Diedrich Knickerbocker, and threatening to publish his
left - behind manuscript to cover unpaid
bills!
Some say that the Secret Service will only investigate if the
bills appear to be at least not obviously
fake in full view, but the way these
bills are used, only the real - looking portion is
left in the open until the server comes over to collect them.
Right, but what about when only the tip is
left in
fake bills, but the meal portion of the check is paid properly?
The cases I see mentioned which get conflicting opinions about specifically say that the main part of the
bill is paid in real money, but the tip (which is arguably optional and may or may not be considered theft) is
left in such
fake bills.