had refused and wanted vs refused and had wanted
Our driver had refused all strong drinks because he wanted to be sober for the trip home.
Is the past perfect tense used correctly here?
I think that the action "want" occured before the action "refuse" ,and therefore we have to say something like this:
Our driver refused all strong drinks because he had wanted to be sober for the trip home.
Re: had refused and wanted vs refused and had wanted
No. If you say "he had wanted to be sober" it suggests that that situation changed and at some point he didn't care if he stayed sober or not.
Our driver refused all drinks because he wanted to stay sober to drive home.