I ran some tests with a long running bit of logic, with the same bit of code (a long SELECT statement) running in both a Table Valued Function and a Stored Procedure, and a straight EXEC/SELECT, and each performed identically.
In my opinion always use a Table Valued Function rather than a stored procedure to return a result set, as it makes logic much easier and readable in queries that subsequently join to them, and enables you to reuse the same logic. To avoid too much of a performance hit, I often use "optional" parameters (i.e. you can pass NULL to them) to enable the function to return the result set to be quicker, e.g.:
CREATE FUNCTION dbo.getSitePermissions(@RegionID int, @optPersonID int, optSiteID int)
AS
RETURN
SELECT DISTINCT SiteID, PersonID
FROM dbo.SiteViewPermissions
WHERE (@optPersonID IS NULL OR @optPersonID = PersonID)
AND (@optSiteID IS NULL OR @optSiteID = SiteID)
AND @RegionID = RegionID
This way you can use this function for many different situations, and don't take a huge performance hit. I believe this is more efficient than filtering afterwards:
SELECT * FROM dbo.getSitePermissions(@RegionID) WHERE SiteID = 1
I have used this technique in several functions, sometimes with a long list of "optional" parameters of this type.