A Manhattan nightclub owner did cocaine off a cocktail waitress’s shoulder after he couldn’t convince her to let him take a toot off her tush, she says in court papers.

In a $3.5 million Manhattan Supreme Court sexual-harassment lawsuit, Nicole Slama says Quo co-owner Gary Malhotra cornered her in a storage closet at his West 28th Street club, and then forced her into using her body as human drug paraphernalia.

“I want to sniff it off your [butt]. You have a great [butt],” Malhotra told her while grabbing her rear in the creepy 2007 attack, the suit says.

Slama had thought she’d gotten a lucky break when a friend of the family offered to help her get a job at Quo — which at that point had been broken up into two separate clubs called Myst and Retox — in 2007.

Slama “had recently left her job as a waitress at Applebee’s because she was not making very much money in tips,” and as “a full-time student, needed income and was told that cocktail waitresses at nightclubs make excellent tips,” the suit says.

On her first shift, she made $500 — but she also started hearing rumors that the owners often used the manager’s office “as a place to do cocaine and to have sex with employees and guests,” the suit says.

Slama said Malhotra offered her coke on a couple of occasions and she turned him down — but he wouldn’t take no for an answer on the night of Dec. 6, when he shoved her into a closet and demanded to do drugs off her derriere.

Slama pushed him away and said “No!” — but he then grabbed her breast and said, “OK, off your [breast] then,” the suit says.

“No!” the 24-year-old said. “I really don’t want to. I want to leave right now. I want to go right now!”

“OK,” Malhotra replied. “Off your shoulder then.” Slama resisted again, and Malhotra told her, “You have to let me, ’cause you work for me.”

He then “slipped the strap of her tank top off her left shoulder and pushed her left hand down so that she could not move it” and shook some coke onto her shoulder, before snorting it off and licking her shoulder and neck, the suit says.

Slama said she “tried her hardest not to cry because she thought it would infuriate him.”

She sneaked out of the club and reported the incident to the cops.

Malhotra was convicted of sex abuse, harassment and forcible touching in December.

Slama’s lawyer, Andrew Miltenberg, said his client was a “sweet, wonderful kid,” and that the criminal convictions speak for themselves.

Reached for comment yesterday, Malhotra said Slama’s suit “had no merit,” and dismissed her as “a disgruntled employee who was fired and who’s seeking monetary gains. Her claims are not substantiated.”

dareh.gregorian@nypost.com

