Juul was hit with its first wrongful death lawsuit Tuesday, filed by a Florida woman who is blaming the vape company after her 18-year-old son died in his sleep.

Lisa Vail’s complaint alleges Daniel Wakefield became addicted to his Juul at age 15, so much so that he “suffered severe mood wings if he did not have access” to his vape pen.

“Plaintiff recalled an instance where Wakefield became enraged and threw a mini-refrigerator from the top floor of his home because he was angry about not being able to vape,” says Vail’s suit, filed in California federal court.

Less than a year after he began vaping, the teen was hospitalized three times for breathing and lung complications — and hospital staff gave him nicotine patches because he was “so addicted to Juul,” the suit says.

Wakefield was found dead Aug. 31, 2018, by his father, who had gotten up to get a drink of water around 4 a.m.

“He noticed Wakefield looked funny; he touched his son and found him stiff and unresponsive,” the suit says.

The night before, Vail spoke to her son and he showed no signs of breathing problems or wheezing.

“His death was attributed to breathing complications,” according to the suit.

Vail, meanwhile, says she feels like she’s been “sentenced to a life of sadness” in the wake of her son’s death.

The lawsuit comes amid a surge of troubling vape-related deaths across the country — and as federal prosecutors investigate the epidemic.

Juul faces other lawsuits by young adults and parents of teenagers who say the company marketed its dangerous products to kids.

Several states, including Massachusetts, New York and Rhode Island, have restricted sales of flavored e-cigarettes.

Twenty-six people have died from vape-related illnesses in 21 states, according to the latest statistics from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, which has recorded nearly 1,300 lung injury cases associated with e-cigarette usage.

Juul didn’t immediately return a message.