Urine trouble, Theo Epstein.

The Chicago Cubs president is currently feuding with his former Arizona landlords because of his dog’s alleged incontinence, according to the Phoenix New Times. During 2015 spring training, Epstein and his family stayed in a Paradise Valley home which they left with “a terrible odor and urine-stained carpeting,” according to a lawsuit their ex-landlords filed Thursday in Maricopa County Superior Court.

John and Mary Valentino claim that they noticed the damage when the Epsteins moved out, notifying them of the problem of April 16 that year and indicating that the cost of the repairs would likely exceed the security deposit.

After unsuccessful attempts to rid the house of the urine damage, the landlords eventually slapped the Epsteins with a $51,405 repair estimate in 2017 to fix up the $1 million home. The Epsteins have not provided their insurance information to the landlords, which they requested to cover the damages.

Through a spokesperson, Epstein denied his dog’s problems and shifted the blame onto his landlords, claiming the property had a scorpion issue that was never properly dealt with.

“This frivolous lawsuit would have you believe a 10-pound rescue puppy transformed into a nightmarish Levitán from the 1984 Alice Cooper horror movie and went on a rampage in a rental property,” Cubs vice president of communications Julian Green said, according to the report. “The truth is the real horror story was the house and inhabited creatures that put this family at risk every time they put their children to sleep.”

Green provided the Phoenix New Times an extermination report from March 9, 2015, which found 45 scorpions on the property. The report has since been confirmed by the exterminator.

Days after the extermination sweep, Green said, Epstein found a scorpion after bathing his infant son, which prompted him to move his family out of the property.

Despite Green’s insistence that the claims are “baseless,” a 2016 quote regarding Epstein’s selection as the No. 1 World Leader by Fortune Magazine pours cold water on his side of the story.

“Um, I can’t even get my dog to stop peeing in the house,” he told ESPN.

The Valentinos, who refused to refund the Epsteins their $5,000 security deposit, declined further comment through a lawyer.