Use the MSSQL Type 4 JDBC driver provide by Microsoft or the jTDS driver. At the time of writing this, the MSSQL JDBC driver offered by Microsoft is at version 3.0 although version 4 is available as a preview release.
Avoid the Sun JDBC ODBC driver, for it really is a bridge to the ODBC driver installed in the machine. Atleast one question has been asked on StackOverflow on why Type 4 drivers ought to be used as opposed to Type 1 (ODBC bridges) or Type 2 (JNI-based) drivers.
To add to the answers posted in that question, Type 1 (ODBC driver bridges) are to be avoided unless you cannot find a JDBC driver from the vendor. After all, it does not make any business sense to have dependencies on both the ODBC driver offered by the vendor, as well as the Sun JDBC-ODBC driver; any bug encountered in production could be in either. Therefore, if you are making this decision for a line-of-business application, you ought to be using a well-tested third-party JDBC driver (like jTDS or DataDirect) or the vendor provided driver (unless your experience suggests that the driver is poorly written or that the vendor is incapable of resolving issues or providing workarounds in a sufficient timespan).