Football star Antonio Brown derailed a deposition late last month by dodging basic questions and repeating his “warped” version of events before walking out, according to court documents.

Brown, 31, sat for the deposition at an office in Miami on Sept. 24 after his former landlord at the Mansions at Acqualina in Sunny Isles Beach sued the embattled wideout for causing $35,000 worth of damage at the luxury condo building in February 2018.

But attorneys for Brown’s former landlord want the former New England Patriot to sit for another deposition, citing his behavior at the initial proceeding, according to court documents obtained by The Blast.

After showing up 20 minutes late, Brown then refused to “answer the most routine of questions” and behaved “extremely noncompliant and flagrantly disorderly,” according to the court documents.

“Rather than answering the questions posed, the defendant chanted, over and over, as if a mantra, a narrative of his own warped concert of the proceedings,” the landlord’s attorney wrote.

Brown even texted during the deposition and ignored his attorneys before he simply “walked out,” according to the filing.

The attorneys claim Brown’s behavior “frustrated the totality of the proceeding,” TMZ reports.

Brown, who has previously denied the allegations, is accused of severely damaging the $7 million oceanfront condo by destroying furnishings, appliances and other items. He later filed a countersuit, claiming his unit was burglarized due to a lack of security there, TMZ reported last month.

Attorneys for Brown’s former landlord now want a special master instead of a judge to oversee a second deposition given the beleaguered star’s string of “tumultuous tirades,” profane language and not acting in a “grown-up” manner, court documents show.

Brown, who was released last month by the New England Patriots amid a sexual assault lawsuit filed against him, should also be fined $10,000 for his antics, attorneys for the landlord claim.

A judge has yet to issue a ruling in response, The Blast reports.