Rapper Travis Scott is suing an exotic car rental company after it allegedly tried to extort $100,000 from him after he was involved in an accident on New Year's Eve.

Court documents filed in Miami-Dade County circuit court obtained exclusively by DailyMail.com reveal that the singer was in a car collision involving a 2012 Lamborghini Aventador that he had rented from Super Cars of Miami.

Kylie Jenner's baby daddy, whose real name is Jacques Webster, 27, claims that although he had already paid the rental service for the damages to the vehicle, the company tried to nab an extra six-figure payout in exchange for their silence on the details of the crash.

The payment came as part of a confidential settlement signed in the lobby of the Miami Beach Edition hotel on New Year's Day, hours after the accident.

But details of the actual crash are scant and the lawsuit provides no information about what happened to the Lambo, except that it hit a Toyota at about 4.45 p.m. somewhere in South Florida on December 31.

The rapper, 27, who has a child with Kylie Jenner, 20, had rented a 2012 Lamborghini Aventador last December that was involved in a car crash with a Toyota around 4.45pm that day

The civil suit shows he had already paid $90,725.45 for repairs for the car when he was asked for an additional $100k. Above is an Instagram photo the rapper uploaded four days before the crash

There is no record of a traffic violation nor is there a police report on a car crash involving the rapper. There's no indication that Scott was driving.

Scott has not filed a criminal complaint against the company nor owner Yaniv Eliyahu, but the civil suit shows he already paid $90,725.45 for repairs to the $400,000 sports car.

He was handed the bill from the shop where the car was repaired, including: $16,107.81 to straighten out the subframe; $5,774 to replace the hood panel; $4,836 to replace a front fender panel; $11,371.10 for headlights; and $9,864.95 for the front bumper face bar.

The Antidote rapper had been in Miami Beach that night to perform at Diddy's party at LIV, a popular beachside nightclub.

Kylie Jenner, who, at the time was eight months pregnant with baby Stormi, did not appear to be along for the trip.

Then, a few weeks after the crash, Super Cars asked Scott - also known as La Flame - for another $100,000 - something that the lawsuit described as an extortion attempt.

According to the court papers, Super Cars threatened 'to violate the terms of the confidentiality provision contained in the settlement agreement by making specious and salacious claims to news agencies and tabloids regarding the accident.'

The Antidote rapper had been in Miami Beach that night to perform at Diddy's party at LIV, a popular beachside nightclub

Scott is seen above during his performance at the night club. Kylie, who was eight months pregnant at the time, is not believed to have made the trip

Scott's payment to the company came as part of a confidential settlement signed in the lobby of the Miami Beach Edition hotel (pictured) on New Year's Day, hours after the accident

According to the lawsuit, the information Super Cars wanted to share would've caused Scott 'irreparable harm to his established goodwill and reputation.'

He had his lawyers file for an emergency hearing where they convinced Judge Rodolfo Ruiz to issue an injunction to prevent Super Cars from talking to the media and force owner Eliyahu to abide with the confidentiality agreement.

In their pleading, Scott's lawyers cited a passage from the settlement with Super Cars that 'both parties agree not to disclose any information regarding the underlying facts leading up to or the existence or substance of the settlement agreement except to either party's spouse, tax advisor, an attorney with whom either party chooses to consult … and federal, state or local government agencies.'

DailyMail.com has reached out to Travis Scott's representatives for comment.

Super Cars operates out of an office on Lincoln Road in Miami Beach. It offers Ferraris, Bentleys, Rolls-Royces, Porsches and other fancy cars for rent for up to $2,000 a day.

According to the lease agreement, Scott rented the Lambo at the rate of $1,800 a day plus $6.50 per mile and a $6,000 deposit. The company delivers its cars into renters' driveways or at hotels.

When reached by telephone, Super Cars owner Eliyahu declined comment.

Super Cars operates out of an office on Lincoln Road in Miami Beach. It offers Ferraris, Bentleys, Rolls-Royces, Porsches and other fancy cars for rent for up to $2,000 a day

Kylie gave birth to her and Scott's daughter Stormi on February 1

His and hers: Kylie took to Snapchat in March to post show off her and Scott's flashy cars. The two have matching Lambo Aventadors. Hers is orange, and his is dark brown

'I can't talk about this stuff,' he said. 'It's all in the court system.'

Eliyahu admitted he has photos and videos of the banged up Lamborghini but declined to show them.

In its answer to the lawsuit, the company denied any extortion attempt.

'This is inflammatory nonsense that lawyers put in lawsuits,' said Yehuda Bruck, Super Cars' lawyer. 'It's not because the word "extortion" is used in a lawsuit that there was extortion. This is a contractual lawsuit, nothing more.'

As a matter of fact, Super Cars counter-sued, claiming negligence from the singer's part and breach of contract.

The counter-suit claims La Flame's people have refused to pay the company for the loss of rental income from the Lambo's time in the shop.

Scott has had a thing for Lamborghinis for years, and it hasn't always turned out well for him.

In late 2016, La Flame filed a lawsuit in Orange County, Calif., against a fancy car broker who pocketed $70,000 of Scott's money for a used Lamborghini Huracan but allegedly failed to deliver the car.

Since then, Scott and Jenner have gotten themselves matching Lambo Aventadors. Hers is orange, and his is dark brown.