another’s person or another person? [closed]

I am doing a little bit of research in the library about negligence (a tort or civil wrong in UK/US legal systems) and I have read this sentence:

Negligence goes beyond the ordinary English concept of ‘carelessness’ or ‘lack of attention’, and describes the unintentional interference with another’s person or property.

I would like some help with this construction: with another’s person. It does not sound natural to me. And I do not understand it. I would expect something clearer, such as with another person or another’s property.

Opinions/Clarification?


'Interference with another’s person or property', means 'interference with somebody else's body and clothes or property'.

Another's is the possessive form of 'another' (somebody else). For example, theft is taking the property of another (or another's property).

Another

a person other than oneself or the one specified:
He told her he loved another

Another (The Free Dictionary)

Person here means body or clothes

Legally, and in old-fashioned English, someone's 'person' is their body, possibly including their clothes.

Person (Merriam-Webster Dictionary)

Person
4 b
the body of a human being
also : the body and clothing
unlawful search of the person