As Joe pointed out, Apple's documentation provides a pretty good overview for using modal view controllers in your app. I suspect that you are thinking about this too much from a programming perspective and not enough from a user perspective, though. Sometimes examples serve to illustrate the point further, so consider the following example.
On the iPhone, the default interaction mode in Mail is one of viewing. Navigation between mailboxes, threads, and messages within this mode is handled by animating transitions between views from the left and right edges of the screen (popping and pushing view controllers). This provides the user with much needed visual context as they are traversing the hierarchy of their email messages.
Since composing a new message is not part of the viewing interaction, it doesn't make sense to animate that view in from the right. The user isn't navigating to a new message, they are creating a new message. Since this is a different interaction, the interface is presented modally. The same is true of moving messages between mailboxes - this too is done modally. These modal views provide visual cues to the user that the way in which they are interacting with the app has changed.