"and it eat in another's field": R. Nathan says: If one were stacking grain in another's field without permission, and the owner's beast came out and damaged it, (I might think that) he is subsumed in "and he send his beast, etc." It is, therefore, written "and it eat in another's field." And this is not "another's."
It Eat in Another's Field, Rabbi Nathan Addressed a Scenario Where
Mekhilta Tractate Nezikin 14:5