A story that sounds like it is straight out of the wild west.

A runaway horse and buggy running rampant in Seymour and leaving behind a trail of damage.

It was around 11:30 last Saturday morning when an Amish man tied up his horse and buggy to the hitch-post at Seymour Bank. But just a minute after he went inside, the horse got loose and galloped down the street.

"He turned right out of the parking lot near the CenturyLink shed," said Corporal Chase Davis, with the Seymour Police Department. "The buggy went sideways and hit the parked CenturyLink van."

The runaway horse continued in the wrong lane of Main Street before taking out a yield sign. The horse then ran into the Seymour Price Cutter parking lot and hit four more cars before finally being stopped.

June Spangler was shopping inside the store when workers called her over the intercom.

"(I thought) maybe somebody had run into it, but not a horse, another car," said Spangler. "I came out of the store and I was like what is going on and I went around this big SUV and there is my car. And I walk up to the front of the car and there is a buggy with the tongue right in my grill. It was stuck in there."

A piece of the buggy had jammed into the engine area of June's car and destroyed her radiator.

"I wasn't very happy. I was upset, because like I said we are an older couple, we try to keep this car in good condition because we can't afford to go out and buy a new car every year." Spangler said.

Seymour police are still trying to figure out what spooked the horse.

"There is nothing on the video that anybody tampered with the horse's reigns or provoked it in any way." Davis said.

In total five cars were hit, plus a road sign, racking up around $9,000 worth of damage. Half of that was to June's car.

"We were hoping to keep this car for the rest of our retirement. It happens though I guess," said Spangler. "I just want to get this taken care of and get a new car, that way I don't have to look at this everyday."

Seymour police say no one was hurt in the mayhem and the horse seemed to be okay as well.

The Amish buggy's do not have insurance, but the victims and the owner of the horse are working out ways to settle for the damage done.